Silhouette (1921)

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Digitized by the Internet Archive

in 2010 with funding from

Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation

http://www.archive.org/details/silhouette192118agne

^gites Scott (Tollege

The Spirit of Agnes Scott

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Atlanta, (Btor^ia
(Eiiairmati nf ttjp Inarli of iBrviatnB

to xolfoie untiring rfforta ms owt mvulf of
ti\t arxtttee of our ^nhommint Olamfiatgn.
uilf a t0 ll|P trup frirnb of porrg Agnra &rott
gtrl. and uit;oB( inrrsaant and rffirirnt arr-
Dtrra I|attp ipmtirli ttf^marltipa of tnmtnpar-
abU nalur to our Alma Mater. tt|ta laSl
Bolumc of lff i'illjoupttr ia rpappttfullg
bfbiratfb. Sq OIIjp Ebitora.

Joseph Kyle Orr

"N y ^

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Inarb of (EruHt^fs

J. K. Orr, Chairman Atlanta

F. H. Gaines, Decatur

C. M. Candler, Decatur

L. C. Mandeville, Carrollton

K. G. Matheson, Atlanta

J. T. LuPTON, Chattanooga, Tenn.

W. C. Vereen, Moultrie

J. S. Lyons, Atlanta

Frank M. Inman Atlanta

Mrs. Samuel M. Inman, Atlanta

Mrs. C. E. Harman, Atlanta

Miss Mary Wallace Kirk, Tuscumbia, Ala.

G. W. MouNTCASTLE, Lexington, N. C.

J. J. Scott, Decatur

D. P. McGeachy, Decatur

George E. King, Atlanta

B. R. Lacy, Atlanta

R. 0. Flinn, Atlanta

H. T. McIntosh, Albany, Ga.

J. R. McCain, Decatur

1920-1921 M

F. H. GAINES, D.D., LL.D.
President

NANNETTE HOPKINS
Dean

M. LOUISE McKINNEY
Professor of English

HARRY L. PAINTER, A.B., M.E., E.E.

University of Virginia, llampden-Sidnoy
Professor of Mathematics

J. D. M. ARMISTEAD, Ph.D.

Washington and Leo University
Professor of English

LILLIAN S. SMITH, A.M., Ph.D.

Syracuse University. Cornell University
Professor of Latin and Greek

MARY FRANCES SWEET, M.D.

Syracuse University. New England Hospital. Boston
Professor of Hygiene

HELEN LEGATE, M.A.

Wellesley College, The Sorbonne. Paris
Professor of Romance Languages

SAMUEL GUERRY STUKES, B.A., A.M.. B.D.

Davidson College. Princeton University. Princeton Seminary

Professor of Education

JAMES ROSS McCAIN, M.A., Ph.D.

University of Chicago. Columbia University
Professor of Sociology and History

MRS. ALMA SYDENSTRICKER, Ph.D.

Wooster University, Four Years a Student in A. I. S. I..

Professor of English Bible

MRS. MARGARET FITZHUGH, M.A., Ph.D.

Columbia University
Professor of Philosophy

CLEO HEARON, Ph.D.

University of Chicago
Professor of Hitory

ROBERT B. HOLT. A.B.

'niversitv of Wisconsin. Instructor in University of Wisconsin,

Graduate Student University of Chicago. lfil.3-'16-'18

Professor of Chemistry

CHRISTIAN W. DIECKMANN, F.A.G.O.

Fellow of the American Cuild of Organists
Professor of Music

MARY STUART MacDOUGALL, B.A., M.S.

Randolph-Macon Woman's College, University of Chicago

Professor of Biology

EMILY HOWSON, M.A.

Bryn Mawr
Physics and Astronomy

CATHERINE TORRANCE, M.A.

University of Chicago
Associate Professor of Latin and Greek

ALICE LUCILE ALEXANDER, B.A., M.A.

Agnes Scott College, Columbia University

Associate Professor of French

FRANCES K. GOOCH, Ph.D.

University of Chicago. Boston School of Expression

Associate Professor of English

Spoken English

LILLIAN STEVENSON, B.A., M.A.

University of Texas, University of Chicago

Associate Professor of History

EMMA MAE LANEY, M.A.

University of Chicago
Associate Professor of English

CHRISTIAN F. HAMFF, M.A.
Professor of German

HATTIE MAY FINLAY, A.B., M.A.

Colorado College, Radcllffe College

Associate Professor of Romance Languages

Spanish

ANNE MARTIN, M.A.

Chicago University

Associate Professor of Sociology and Economics

AGATHA BROWN, M.A.
Vanderbilt University
Instructor in French

MYRA I. WADE, B.A.

Oberlin College
Professor of Physical Education

LLEWELLYN WILBURN, B.A.

Agnes Scott College
Instructor of Physical Education

EMMA MOSS DIECKMANN, B.A.

Agnes Scott College
Instructor in English

AUGUSTA SKEEN, B.A.

Agnes Scott College

Assistant Professor of Chemistry

CHARLOTTE HAMMOND, B.A.

Agnes Scott College
Instructor in Latin and German

JULIA ROTHERMELL, B.A.

Mount ilolyoke
Instructor in Biology

JANET NEWTON, B.A.

Aj?nes Scott College
Instructor in French

FRANCES SLEDD, B.A.

Agnes Scott College
Instructor in Mathematics

ALMEDA HUTCHESON, B.A.

Agnes Scott College
Instructor in History

LOUISE GARLAND LEWIS

University of Paris. .
mie Julian, Ecole Del

Art and Art History

LEWIS H. JOHNSON

Graduate Pomona College School of Music, New York
Musical Art. Student William Nelson Burrett, New

Voice Culture

KATHERINE VAN DUSEN SUTPHEN
Graduate New England Conservatory, Student Illinois t
Piano

ELIZABETH MARSH, B.A.

-ignes Scott College
Piano

W. W. HUBNER
Violin

ETHEL CURRY

Student .Arthur .T. Hulibard. P.oston
Assistant in Voice Culture

ALICE LONGSHORE, B.A.

Vniversity of Montana, Graduate Atlanta Library Sc
Librarian

S(LHpoeTTe" _5>

/ Y ^\

Ethel Wabe
Asst. Editor-in-Chief

^\{[\nmXtri i>tafif

.Mary Axxe Ji'Stice
PliotoyrapUic Editor

AXCES C. JIARKI.EY

Editor-in-Chief

Theressa Newto.n
Business Manager

JIlXNIE Ali.en

Elizabeth Browx

Mary C. McKinxey
Advertising Manager

Assistant Art Editor Asst. Business Manager

Ruth Evans
Adrerti-sing Manager

:>>c

BOOK I. The Campus

BOOK II. The Classes

BOOK III. Organizations

BOOK IV. Athletics

BOOK V. Features

BOOK VI. College Life

v^

(Q

N Annual whicK would bring to each Agnes
Scott girl a flood of memories of the year
[Af^ that IS past; an Annual which might con-
vey to a casual reader the atmosphere and
the spirit of the college which we love; an
Annual in some measure reflecting the living, breath-
ing soul of our college, we, the Editors, have at-
tempted to publish.

And, though we knew that the ideal was beyond our
reach, we have truly tried to make this book one of
which you might be proud, and one which would re-
call to your mind the many joys of this year.

If, in the time to come, scanning this volume, you
feel memory taking you back, back into days that
have passed, we shall be happy.

The Editors.

XooKlns ^b'^ougl)

I5l)e (Gateway.

T^rom "D^e "portico.

Z3^(i Stately (Toloitnade.

to :aahcKal) Scott 3fall.

^n Ancient ^aitdmark

I3l)e yttay; 3a? Oak.

'3 Oitl? (Tount

O^e SunuY 'Kours."

J.M. i.:ifS^=^^2i^.s;s&^^s

^ (BUmpsa of Science 3fall
I3brou9^ X5\:iz Orees.

l*Cl6e5 XJl^intrj Orees.

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(92

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.\iMEK D. Glover .
Frances Whitfield
Anna Marie Landress

Agee, Caroline H.
Allen. Dorothy
Bell, Charlotte
Bell, Margaret
Blackmon, Myrtle
Brewer, Augusta
Brown, Thelma
Carpenter, Eleanor
Carr, Isabel
CoMPTON. Lois
Cawthon. Marion
Clarke, Edith
Connett, Cora
Cousins, Marguerite
Daye, Nelle Frances
Enloe, Elizabeth
Finney, Mary Robb
Floding, Elizabeth
Fulton, Sarah

i'nttor Qllass

OFFICERS

. President .

Vice-President

Secretary-Treasurer

MEMBERS

Glover, Aimee D.
Gordon, Eleanor
Green, Mary Louise
Hall, Helen
Hamner, Pearl Lowe
Hanes, Mariwil
Havis, Dorothy
Hedrick, Margaret
HuTTER, Emily
Harrison, Sarah
Johnston, Eugenia
Jones, Alice Lake
Justice, Mary Anne
Lainc, Martha
Landress, Anna Marie
Lindsay, Marian
McAlister, Jean
McCaa, Fannie D.

. AiMEE D. Glove?.

Mary Louise Green

Eula Russell

McCuRDY, Sarah

McLaughlin, Margaret

Markley, Frances Charlotte

Newton, Charlotte

Newton, Theressa

Parry, Lina

Preston, Janef'

RusHTON, Rachel

Russell, Eula

Spence, Clotile

Saunders, Julie

Smith, Lucile

Stansell, Sarah

Wade, Margaret

Watkins, Julia

Watkins, Marguerite

Wayt, Helen

Whitfield, Frances

Wilson, Ellen Garnett

..^~

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AlMEE DUNWODY GlOVER

"Ames" English and Sociology Major

Marietta, Ga.

Ifs not because you're jolly.

And never a trifle blue.
It's not because your ivords

Are never sloiv and jew.
It's not because you're pretty,

Though,^ of course, we knoiv that's true.
But the reason we all love you.

Is b^cau e you're you.

Caroline H. Agee

English Major
Anniston, Ala.

Here's to Caroline, the hockey nar.
And in debating jamed ajar.
Unassuming, yet so nveet.
A truer jriend you'll never meet.
Freshmen cares she doth assuage
And we all think she's a reg'lar sage.

9.)

Dorothy Clark Allen

"Dot" Philosophy Major

LaFayette, Ala.

Cutest tittle red head thing, just knee-high to

a duck.
Girl that got her for a sister had a heap of

luck;
Smiling all the ivhile, from early morn till

night.
Doing all the little things that make the

world go right.

Charlotte Witherspoon Bell

"Polly"

Shelbyville, Ky.

French Major

Neat and sweet, efficient, too.

This is Charlotte Bell;
A worker, no shirker, that is true,

(I do not have to tell).
If e'll see who she'll be and will not feel dis-
may
At her renown, the country round, some day
not far away.

<1

Margaret Wayt Bell

"Peg" Philosophy Major

Lewisburg, W. Va.

"Peg" smiles night and day
And scatters sunshine all the way;
Her winsome eyes are merry
When blue, they make us cheery.
Here's to you, "Peg" Bell,
If e love you, dearie!

Myrtle Claire Bl.\ckmon

'"Destitute" Latin Major

Columbus, Ga.

She's a marvel in a hockey game.
And in her looks she's just the same.
A cheerful word for everyone,

A helping hand to lend;
After all is said and done

The very best sort of a friend.

92uj!!:^^E^^'^Zj92^

rw

Alglsta Hele.ne Ukevvek

"Gus" Chemistry Major

Birmingham, Ala.

There was a young lady named Brewer,
Beloved by all those ivho knew her.

As "Gus" she ivas known.

In all hearts was enthroned.
For there never tvas one ivho tvas truer.

TlIELMA BkOWIM

"T. B."

English Major

Atlanta, Ga.

She's dainty and sweet and diminutive
This dear Senior sis of mine;

Her favorite sport is riding
On the main Decatur line!

I

I

Eleanor Bl.\ke Carpenter

"Sky-scraper" French Major

Louisville, Ky.

There was a young lady named Carpenter,
Who went to France to get smarter;

Noiv all that she knoivs

Is to turn up her nose
And say "Oo! la! la! Sweet pa! pa!
'Fac and I agree so beautifully on grades!"

Isabel Carr

'"Jez" History Major

Harriman, Tenn.

Work never worries her

"Jez" is always gay;
At any ol' time, at any oV place.

She's very glad to play.
Just the sort of Senior si'ter

Everyone should have, 1 say.

Ji

Marion McCaskill Cawthon

'"Kaiser" Philosophy Major

DeFuniak Springs, Fla.

Mirror, mirror, on the wall.
Who's the cleverest of us all?
W ho can make real baby-talk
Funny in manner, speech and walk?
Marion Cawthon, best of all.
Mirror, mirror, on the wall.

Edythe Bland Clarke
"None" Mathematics Major

ASHEVILLE. N. C.

Here's to my Senior, Edythe Clarke,
In Math and Science she's a shark;

She has everyone beat.

With her none can compete.
And she's alivays in for a lark.

Lois Compton

French Major

Atlanta, Ga.

"A perfect woman, nobly planned.
To warn, to comfort and command."
Thus Wadsworth spoke with prophetic voice.
And who can deny he meant our Lois?

Cora Connett

"Co" French Major

Joseph, Missouri

Pretty and siveet, we'll all agree

U ith other charms galore.
The very best friend that ever could be

'Tis Cora, whom we adore.

11 (n

^92

Marguerite Cousins

English Major
Decatur, Ga.

To you I cannot halj express
Her charming grace, and loveliness.
Her brilliance, wit, her well-known fame
In Blackfriars, where she's won a name.
I'll tell you, though, she can't be beat.
My Senior sister. Marguerite!

Nelle Frances Daye

"Pampy" Latin Major

HuNTSviLLE, Ala.

Here's to my Senior sister.

Her presence brings delight
But the main fact is that I love

Nelle Frances Daye and night.

Elizabeth Enloe

English Major
Atlanta, Ga.

Here we have a poet of renown.

Who welt deserves her cap and gown.

In B.O.Z. she shows her art.

In other things she does her full part.

Mary Robb Finney

"Bobby" Latin Major

Decatur, Ga.

O, what a girl is Mary Robb!

O, what a pal is she!
How sweet a girl.
And hoiv much I love her.

Nobody knows but me!

Elizabeth Floding

'"Betty" French Major

Atlanta, Ga.

O, happy is our Betty, with her eyes of shining

brown ;
Now, lab seems so much brighter when Betty

is around.
Her plays in hockey, basket-ball and tennis

are so rare.
That there's not another Betty ivith our Betty

could compare.

Sarah Louise Fluker

"Fluker" Sociology Major

Thomson, Ga.

Sitting on the library steps.

Waiting in the sun.
For the budget to be paid

Till the day is done;
We envy Fluker s bu iness sense.

Her endless store of fun.

Sarah Hamilton Fulton

"Sally Mander" English Major

Decatur, Ga.

When fairies o'er your cradle bent

With gift-bestowing their intent.

They ivhispered, "By our magic arts

We'll make you queen of minds and hearts."

And this is ivhy you're unsurpassed

An actress, scholar, friend steadfast.

Eleanor Moreman Gordon

Philosophy Major
Fort Defiance, Va.

Giving cheer to all she knows.

On through life she takes her ivay;
Renewing joy where'er she goes.
Dearer to us every day.

Others first, her chief command

Never fails her helping hand.

(9

Mary Louise Green

"Mary Lou" Sociology Major

Corinth, Miss.

She never is knoivn to be blue.

As a friend she is loyal and true;

She has lots of fun.

Befriends everyone
Do you know whom I mean? "Mary Lou."

Helen Wright Hall

"Sis" French Major

Decatur, Ga.

Your attention I call
To one Helen Hall,

Whose ability won her great fame.
She starred in many a play
And can "parlez-francais,"

It's with pride that 1 mention her name.

Pearl Lowe Hamner

"Polly'' Sociology Major

BuENA Vista, Ga.

Pearl Lowe Hamner is a girl

That we all adore,
I say that we all love her so.

And what could 1 say more?

Sarah Rebecca Harrison
"Sibi" History Major

MURFREESBORO, TeNN.

Sarah Harrison, you are so lovely.

Tall and stately as a queen,
You're the only one for me.

The sweetest girl Vve ever seen!

(Q2

"Bluff"

Anne Hart

Atlanta, Ga.

Latin Major

If you want to have the blues chased away.
If you want to be where everybody's gay.
If you want a girl with a good disposition,
A girl who can meet any proposition.
Then this is no news that I to you impart-
You are looking for original Anne Hart.

Mariwil Hanes

"Billie" English Major

JONESBORO, Ga.

A day of riddles it chanced to be, and this is

the song sung to me
By a bird of spring just come, I ween
To tempt me ivith promise of days unseen:
"What is dearer than birds and flowers, what

is sweeter than summer shoivers?"
The answer, repeated like old refrains,
"My Senior Sister, Maritvil Hanes."

Dorothy Havis

"Dot"

Atlama, Ga.

History Major

iris ;

"Queen rose of the rosebud garden of

Queen lily and rose in one."
A rose that is young and fragrant and sweet,

A golden rose kissed by the sun.
As sweet as Georgia air can make her.
All this and more, too, is Dorothy.

Margaret Hedrick

"Peggie" English

Bristol, Tenn.

Oh, poet, come, ivrite me a song to the lass,
Whose charm and whose siveetness none else

can surpass.
She's the best on the campus; "If'ho is she?"

you beg?
Hoiv foolish the question, you know she's my

"Peg."

(0 9)^

Emily C. Hutter

"Emmaline" History Major

Lynchburg, Va.

Washington, Marshall, Wilson and Lee,
All from Virginia, great men we agree.
So the "Old Dominion," to keep up her rep.
Sent Emily down here, brim jull of pep.

Eugenia Johnston

"Genie" History Major

Atlanta, Ga.

"My pretty girl.

My witty girl.
My girl so full of fun.

My brainy girl.

My saintly girl.
My thousand girls in one!"

y

Alice Lake Jones

"Sis" Mathematics Major

Jacksonville, Fla.

Alice Jones is good and sweet.

Her nickname is that of "Sis,"
All my ideals she certainly does meet.

And of my pals, she heads the list.

Mary Anne Justice
French Major.
Atlanta, Ga.

Booster of all that pertains to our College,
Lover of all in the great world of knowledge.
In literature surpassing the rabble by far;
With minds of great thinkers, her mind's on a

par.
Let any who will, do whatever she can.
But who can compare to our dear Mary Anne?

(Q2,

Martha S. Laing

"Marfa" English Major

Lewisburc, W. Va.

Sweet and helpful and ever kind.
Another like her you'll never find.
When she leaves, oh, how I'll miss her,
Martha Laing, my Senior sister.

Anna Marie Landress

"Nanna" Bible Major

Chattanooga, Tenn.

Ife admire her fame in hockey.

And in debating, too
In posters, Greek, and "high finance,"

My! What can't she do?
But this is why we love her, in quiet and in

fun.
She is the sort of person we can depend upon.

Marian Lindsay

"Petite"

Latin Major

Miami, Fla.

Marian is the girl for me.
Always full of fun and glee.
Right there when there's any trouble
It will vanish like a bubble.
Another finer girl, all-round.
Never, never can be found.

Jean McAlister

'"Petit Enfant" English Major

Greensboro, N. C.

Ther-r-r-re lots of cute and flippant things.
You Souther-r-rn girls would say of Jean,

You'd call her-r-r angel sans the wings
A spor-r-rt that plays on ever-r-ry team.

.4 Yankee tale I will r-r-relate

I'll r-r-roll my r-r's and say, "Jean's gr-r-reat!"

'cT]

^

(9 2

Fanny Dargon McCaa

"Fan" Biology Major

Anniston, Ala.

Kind and loyal, a friend to all.

She's always ready at any call.

Whether it be athletics, Y. W. or Blackfriars,

She's never too busy to grant your desires;

A girl to honor, a girl to trust.

One whom all love, because they must.

Sarah Carter McCurdy

"Cousin Rufus" Chemistry Major

Stone Mountain, Ga.

"Where are you going, my sweet 'Mack?' "
"I'm going to Agnes Scott," she answered

back.
"What is your ambition, my pretty maid?"
"To marry a doctor, sir," she said.

Margaret Price McLaughlin

"Marg" English Major

Raphene, Va.

Did you ever hear of such a store of talent

As is given our president of student govern-
ment?

For she stars in basket-ball, hockey and tennis ;

By her singing, too, she uill always ivin us.

In executive prowess there's none that's above
her.

But just 'cause she's Margaret that's ivhy ue
love her.

Frances Charlotte Markley

"F. C." English Major

Lancaster, Pa.

If hen Frances Charlotte Markley graduates

from A. S. C,
She'll be missed upon the campus.

In Blackfriars and B. O. Z.,

K. U. B. and Agonistic
She belonged to all of them, and yet,
Somehoiv she found the time to write, this

sporty Silhouette!

Vienna Mae Murphy

"Mary"' Mathematics Major

Louisville, Ga.

In mu ic she excels us all.

In Math a future great has she

Ife wonder how she can display
Such unassuming modesty!

Charlotte Newton

English Major
Athens, Ga.

In hockey she stars.

And has been on exec
So long, it could not

Do without her, "by heck!"

Thekessa ^EUTu^

"Tlieres"' History Major

Madison, Ga.

'Tis no use to repeat that she's clever.
For in college her wit failed her never.

On Silhouette she ivas fine.

In life she will shine.
She's a girl we can count on forever.

LlNA CO.N.N FaRK\

"Connie" French Major

Atlanta, Ga.

Conscientious in her work.
Acting friend to everyone.

At her best in all she does,
Lina second is to none.

Janef JNewnan Preston

English Major
Bristol, Tenn.

In classes she's brilliant, and out of them

then
Genius just drips from the point of her pen.
And though she turns out many poems and

stories.
And free-verse, yet these are not half of her

glories,
A president's dignity she can assume
And boss things around in the cabinet room.

Kachel Kushton

"Rach"

Latin Major

Montgomery, Ala.

To tell of Rachel's many powers
You people know, 'twould take just hours.
So let it be said in this very small space.
She's brilliant, talented, and full of grace.
She shows her ivork in all she's done.
At A. S. C. all honors she's ivon.

EuLA Nichols Russell

"Aalic"' Latin Major

Spring Hill, Tenn.

She's dainty and trim and petite.
With a smile that's merry and stveet.

She's got all the knowledge.

That's taught in this college.
And at hockey she just can't be beat!

Clotile Spence

''Tilly" History Major

Newnan, Ga.

A radiant personality,

A girl of good hard sense.
But best oj all a real true friend

All this is Tilly Spence.

(92)

Julie Adams Saunders

English Major.
Valdosta, Ga.

Here's to our Julie,

Gee! But she's smart.

Short stories she writes.

Reads "Deutsch and what not!"
But with all of her knowledge and all of her

skill.
She's pretty and dainty a true friend still!

LuciLE Pauline Smith
"Cile" Philosophy

MuRFREESBORO, TeNN.

The most tulented girl at Agnes Scott,

She can do all the things other people can not;

She plays on the piuno, and violin, and sings.

And these are only a few of the things

She can do, for the Agnes Scott Blackfriars

oivn
She's the cleverest actress that they've ever

known.

LHOuerrc

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Sarah Jane Stansell

"Frankie" English

Chattanooga, Tenx.

"S" stands for Sarah,
And "S" for Stansell, too,
"S. S." for the sweetest sister
That ever any girl knew.

Martha J. Stansfield

'"Arbuckle" Latin Major

Bradentown, Fla.

// you've heard of girls with intelligent minds.
If you've heard of girls ivho are dear.

If you've heard of girls with gifts of all kinds.
Then this is Martha, a friend sincere.

Amy Curry Twitty

"Twitty"' Sociology Major

Pelham, Ga.

ff'ith smiling eyes and curly hair,

"She's a daisy, we declare."

Have you ever seen her dance?

You know her then, I'll take a chance.

For it is to Amy Twitty

That I dedicate my ditty.

Margaret Stuart Wade

"Snooks" Mathematics Major

Raphine, Va.

The name of our Senior, Margaret Wade,
Never from our minds will fade.
With her in Math no one can cope.
Besides, she's an officer in dear old Prop.

Julia Watkins

"Jule" History Major

Lake Charles, La.

Little Julia, with soft flaxen hair.
And bright blue eyes, is a damsel fair.
Everybody is fond
Of this siveet little blond.
For she smiles as with never a care.

Marguerite H. Watkins

"Margery"' English Major

Jackson, Miss.

Marguerite's capability in College activities,
and her unselfish, conscientious devotion to
duty, have given her a leadership which will
not only endure as she goes out in to the world,
but tvill afford inspiration to her friends who
will remain here behind her.

S(LHC?oeTTe fQ,^,

\
v5

Helen Brice Wayt

"Hel"

Atlanta, Ga.

Latin Major

In hockey, track and basket-ball, Helen Wayt

is Tight there.
She has a way of entering sports that few can

here compare.
We love her ready smiling ways

And everything about her.
And when she leaves our A. S. C.
What luill we do without her?

Frances W. Whitfield

"Fan" Sociology Major

Hawkinsville, Ga.

Frances quiet and unassuming.

Charms us with her dimpled smile.

And her talent musical

Makes us marvel all the while.

Fain would I here also mention.
The suitors that she does beguile.

Ellen G. Wilson

'Nell" English Major

Lexington, Va.

My big sister, you are loyal and true.
And all the ivhile a friend worth while.
You find it your lot, here at Agnes Scott,
To win in the fray in our Y . W . C. A.

John McCain
Sponsor of the Class of 1921

You'll all agree to make things new.
The class of "21 must do
Something different. And so we can
Make John McCain our only man.

i>0ntor iFarult^ ii^mhrra

Mr. Stukes

Miss Wilburn Miss MacDougall

Miss Alexander

Caroline Acee Annie Byrd Maxwell

Dorothy Allen Concord Leak

Charlotte Bell Frances Stuart

Margaret Bell Frances Arant

Myrtle Blackmon Quenelle Harrold

Augusta Brewer Jane Knight

Thelma Brown Elizabeth Ransom

Eleanor Carpenter .... Mary George Kincannon

Isabel Carr Susie Reid Morton

Lois Compton Edythe Davis

Marion Cawthon Margaret Thorington

Edith Clarke Mary Stewart Hewitt

Cora Connett Elizabeth Hoke

Marguerite Cousins Beth Flake

Nelle Frances Daye Lucile Little

Elizabeth Enloe Clara Waldbop

Mary Robb Finney Eileen Dodd

Elizabeth Floding Mary Goodrich

Louise Fluker Elizabeth Parham

Sarah Fulton Edith McCallie

AiMEE D. Glover Betty Brown

Eleanor Gordon Gertrude Samuels

Mary Louise Green Christine Evans

Helen Hall Viola Hollis

Pearl Lowe Hamner Margaretta Womelsdorf

Anne Hart Rhea King

Mariwil Hanes Sarah Belle Brodnax

Margaret Hedrick Elizabeth Malloy

Emily Hutter Lucy Howard

Sarah Harrison Virginia Ordway

Eugenia Johnston Eleanor Hyde

Alice Lake Jones Anne Gambrill

Mary Anne Justice Josephine Logan

Martha Laing Lois McLean

Anna Marie Landress Mary Caldwell

Marian Lindsay Dorothy Scott

Jean McAlister Margaret Hay

Fannie McCaa Hilda McConnell

Sarah McCurdy Martha Ballard

Margaret McLaughlin Eloise Knight

Frances Charlotte Markley . . . Margaret McColcan

Vienna Mae Murphy Myrtle Murphy

Charlotte Newton Pearl Smith

Theressa Newton Annie Earl Farmer

Lina Parry Frances Harwell

Janef Preston Polly Stone

Rachel Rushton Louise Crossland

Eula Russell Catherine Waterfield

Clotile Spence Louise Brown

Julie Saunders Fredeva Ocletree

Lucile Smith Hazel Bordeaux

Sarah Stansell Minnie Lee Clarke

Martha Stansfield Mary Stuart McLeod

Amy Twitty Virginia Burum

Margaret Wade Emily Guille

Julia Watkins Margaret McLean

Marguerite Watkins Alice Virden

Helen Wayt Margaret Turner

Frances Whitfield Margaret Ransom

Ellen Wilson Elizabeth McClure

(9 2)'-v-^i-

^mcr (Elaas l^atm

With gladness noiv we pause upon the way
While from the vivid years the glad dreams stray;
We find again in this far-seeing place
Old joys, dim remembered, for a space,
While Memory flings the gate to Yesterday.
The call of Spring; hard work; the thrill of play;
Friends; lights agleam at end of day;
And song, and silence, "These ours!" to say

With Gladness.

Through sun-crowned years to one glad wistful May
We come, oh. Alma Mater! Hearts would stay
To learn new graciousness of thy dear grace.
Yet shall the homeivard way our spirits trace
Within thy trusting hands our own to lay

With Gladness.

Janef Preston, Class Poet.

^ftitor dlasa l^tBtorg

slide through the tunnel, stumble over the steps and slip through the
F gate was to eflfect an entrance for the class of '21 to the campus of Agnes
Scott. Once inside the portals the hopes and fears of all our years rose
up to meet us. They passed themselves in an enveloping cloud that
dimmed for the first few days that omnipresent clear vision we had
brought from Senior High School. To the college we were legion; were atoms of
humanity, like so many yellow dandelions that had sprung up overnight on the
campus. Even so, some cherished the dream of a growth into chrysanthemums in
the approaching future. Only the few adjudged this a corner to nod and dream.
The glamour of college life faded while we grew old before our time under the
deprivations of Sophomore week. In the subsequent clash of wits we made a con-
quest we were the first Freshman class allowed to keep the cat. We were sought
by fame and the literary societies. They loomed up omnipresent and urgent until a
Freshman's fate was to go blue or stay green. Holidays came on in broken doses,
prescribed by a thoughtful faculty. Along with the approach of Spring athletic ac-
tivities increased and our participation won us the cup. Only a flurry of exami-
nations to withstand before we were ready for a Summer's play. Perhaps, then, we
couldn't possibly define a parabola, but we had learned the Alma Mater and we
knew those boundaries of Kirkwood and Ingleside.

Beginner's luck turned a bit in the Fall. The withdrawal of some members who
wished to go on before wrought havoc in the ranks. Moreover, with true imitative
instinct the ruthless newcomers of '22 snatched the cat. With the end of Sopho-
more week our reign of terror had fallen and our glory had departed. But when
sad we could sing and act well, so we made a success of the Follies of "21. The
villain misfortune still pursued us in that we lost the cup which symbolized our
championship. But grown-up Seniors for sisters and a spirit with the resilience of
a rubber heel will get you by any year even as this one.

True it is that the darkest hour comes just before the dawn, and as Juniors we
obliterated all but happy times from the past. The hockey field we swept in invin-
cible array until every game added itself to our scoreboard. That was one of the
reasons why the cup for prowess in athletics came wandering home again. This time
we held it in part ownership with the Seniors. We took our fun in the Junior ban-
quet; we paid for our fun with the Junior circus. The hours we spent on that one
feast, the care with which we reproduced on the festal board the last long record
of a Senior's life, only the Juniors know. 'Twas love for the Seniors wrought it
all may it live in their memories as it did on our pocketbooks!

Reversion to type opened the real Senior year, as for the space of one day we
snatched the hairs and curls of our childhood. The culmination of our hopes was
investiture. The solemnity of the occasion pushed aside the every-day world. We
went down the aisle, not normal beings, but as so many sweetly solemn little
thoughts. The Sophomores formed our advance guard and stood by valiantly. To
be invested with Senior robes by the hand of the Dean was to be set apart for certain
individual rights, to take food when one wished, to have a place in the sun after
ten o'clock at night. The path grew wide before us and pleasures awaited, but in it
all we were essayed to study a bit when time would permit. On Sunday afternoons

over our cups of Senior coffee we discussed weighty matters, such as our own af-
fairs and what to do with them. Almost beyond belief, the scurrying days came to a
halt before May Day, now a spectacle queened by one from among us, and a first
signal for the mental and festive preparations prior to the final departure of '21.

Records were made, not written, and it yet remains for each girl to piece in bit by
bit her own experiences into this pattern of the whole. Our memories of the four
years here have grown into our life as things too live to be interred with our books.
They are a part of us, and with them we slip again beneath the underpass to change
once more the old days for new.

Martha S. Laing, Historian.

Pr0pl][rrg 0f tl|p Ollaaa nf 19ai

AST wastes of blue stretched on either side of us. To the north lav
the foothills of the Rocky Mountain range, filling the horizon with a
wild and silent grandeur, while the sands of the Texas desert sent up
great heat waves which almost reached us as we skimmed along over
the sand dunes. The purple shadow of our plane would scare the little
prairie dogs and send them scurrying down into their nests as the great bird of the
air passed over their village.

Suddenly the staccato roar of the engine ceased. A swift glance over the side of
the plane proved that fortunately we had gained the outskirts of a village and might
land on a smooth, hard surface, which stretched out for several yards and shone white
in the beaming noonday sun. A long drawn-out moan and the great revolving wheels
stood still. Then came the swift coasting with its skillful turn at the end which landed
us safe on the broad, white, roomy space.

The open spot proved to be the arena of an ancient Spanish city and here and
there dirty pieces of red flannel told their own barbarous tale. We alighted and shook
the rice from our leather coats and laughingly wondered if Mexican ladies wore
Spring hats in December, and fared forth in quest of gasoline and lunch. We soon
found that we were several miles from the ancient village of Catalapeque, and that it
would take several hours of a walking in the blazing Mexican sun before either gaso-
line or lunch would be forthcoming. Neither of us knew any Spanish or Mexican,
so we wandered around, hoping, like the optimistic Mr. Micawber, that something
would turn up.

Presently something did happen. A curious old lady came stumbling out of a
fanciful house across the street, and went wildly screaming down the path. Nat-
urally our attention was directed toward the old house. It stood rather far back from
the road and seemed to be an exact replica of a castle in Spain. There were fantastic
turrets shooting this way and that from its roof, and stained glass windows protected
the upstairs rooms from the glare. A fountain, or rather the remains of one, stood
(or does one say sat?) on what was once a terraced lawn, and on the top of the
fountain, where water should have arisen, was a cardboard bearing the honest Chris-
tian word, "Information."

Naturally we applied. A peculiar servant answered the pounding of the brass
knocker on the door. The yellow turban on his head, the innumerable brass but-
tons on his pocket and the long pantaloons ending in the turned-up Turkish slippers
betrayed little knowledge or acquaintance with either gasoline or lunch. Before we
could proff"er any conversation in either Latin, Greek, Hebrew or French, the young
Turk had marched us into a dimly lighted room, seated us and don't forget the
Spring hat on the floor and several Oriental sofa cushions and left us again to
wait for something to turn up.

Presently "Madame" turned, and in the king's own English, she asked us our
troubles. She seemed thoroughly acquainted with gasoline deficiencies and
despatched the masculine portion of her household to the village for help. Mean-
while, she assumed, and correctly, that I wanted other "information" and led me
mto another room, which bore the sign on the door, "Consultation Room." I felt
as if I were seeking some remedy for wisdom teeth or tonsils, but soon found that
when one consulted spirits, the process was quite different.

Q2)]

The "consulting room" was almost dark, lighted up by a single crystal globe in
the middle, which glowed with a sort of opalescence at times. Here and there I no-
ticed curious incense burners, gay oriental pillows or an eastern robe thrown
over a chair carved with curious dragons. Presently Madame entered. She had
changed to a Turkish costume of pale colors and over her dark black hair a trans-
parent veil was fastened. She took her seat behind the crystal globe and gazed for
a while into its depths, and presently she spoke.

"You have friends, my child; friends you knew long ago in a distant land. I see
them scattered here, there, and everywhere. Shall I tell you of their varied for-
tunes?" I eagerly assented, and after again looking long into the crystal globe,
the strange mystic began her story.

"I see a far-off land. It is China, perhaps Korea. Among the people moves a
fair-haired woman, and ever and anon over the mingled oriental sounds comes one
stentorian cry, 'Anybody got any clothes to go to the Trio?' Far out on the edge
of the town stands the laundry, and each morning Charlotte Bell fares forth to the
town only to return at night laden with the clothes of the near-by Chinese village.

"The scene changes. There are athletes, some jumping, some running. But ever
the highest jumper, ever the fleetest runner is Myrtle Blackmon. So great is her
prowess, so charming her manners, that she has become known among the French
peasants as 'L'Americainne qui rit-toujours.'

"Again I see a crowded city. People press hard upon each other. Here a burly
officer of the law shouts his orders. But, lo ! the boiling commerce of the thorough-
fare calms down. For into the troubled throng ride the lady policemen, brandish-
ing their powder puffs and calling for order. The men press around. Again a
wild clamor is heard as the mob recognizes the officers Captains Francis Whitfield
and Amy Twitty, of the New York mounted police. They hold the record for the
largest number of arrests among the male population yet listed.

"Once more the scene changes. I see Jean Jean McAlister moving silently
down a ward. In her hand she clutches a bottle and on her cap she wears the slogan,
'Better babies.' When infants yell or seem displeased she points a stern finger to a
portrait on the wall and ever says, 'Child, there is your model my niece.'

"The globe presents a desert. Under yon date tree a silent figure lies asleep on
the sand. "Thus fate shows us Maryanna Justice, asleep after a long journey. A stray
breeze awakens her and she rouses, to send her haunting cry resounding through the
sand dunes. 'True heart, where art thou? The same moon shines upon us both,
and yet I cannot find thee.'

"Again the scene changes. You see the globe grow dark, lit now and then with a
rosy hue. I see a silent house. No sound is heard, for the people are all dumb.
Silently through the echoing halls walks Charlotte Newton, the mistress of the home.
She sighs and with a gentle smile breathes three short words, 'Quiet at last.'

"The picture of a bustling store presents itself. The globe grows bright with the
reflection of wine-colored liquids and the warmth of the hurry and voices around a
certain window. There sits Clotile Spence, her glowing, golden tresses reaching the
floor. Behind her in gigantic proportions rises the legend 'Use Our Miracle Hair
Tonic. It cured mine.'

"Sprightly figures shoot through the globe, filling it with a dull green and dead
brown color. Wild confusion reigns, but in the center sits a calm figure singing
from a hymn book in a deep bass voice, 'From Greenland's icy mountain.' The
heathen gather closer and Anna Marie begins her story. They say she even sold her
Gamma Tau pin to help supply the heathen with chewing gum.

"The scene has shifted miles away from the desert cannibal land. I see a serious,
business-like face, rising above a white collar. Busy fingers sort photographs, ad-

f

dress envelopes, clip news ads. On the crystal door front of the prosperous office
building hangs the sign, 'Margaret Wade, Agent, Grab and Hooker Matrimonial
Agency. Apply within.'

"The globe takes on a ruddy cast. There is a scene of wild confusion a street
riot. The people shout and scream in the street and call continually on one Mar-
garet Bell. They seem to be circus people and one standard bears this inscription,
"We Are the Organized Fat Women of the World,' while another tells a pitiful tale,
'We are starving.' Ever in the center, ever procuring food for the needy is the
president Peg.

"A dark black surges through the globe, soon to be displaced by snowy white-
ness. In the midst of this radiance sits Alice Jones busily hemstitching long seams.
First she fashions a snowy silk gown next a cap with a silver tassel. Little clip-
pings show Sis' ambition along advertising lines, 'The Radiance Cap and Gowii Shop,
successors to Cotrell & Leonard. Buy early, wear every day. Styles latest from
Paris.'

"The scene shifts quickly. The globe is brilliant with light and happiness. For
is not Vienna Mae Murphy reversing the theory of thrice a bridesmaid, and even now
becoming a bride?

"I see a school room. The drowsy hum of study hangs heavy in the atmosphere.
The students, all boys long, tall boys, who for many years pursue the study of
Latin, with ceaseless repetition. The teacher. Miss Marian Lindsey, uses a new va-
riety of stilts, lately patented by Mr. Cunningham, that she may reach the ears of the
long, tall boys and whisper sweet words of wisdom there.

"Through the luxurious gloom of a dim theatre I see an opera singer. 'Tis
Margaret McLaughlin, now Mme. Henri Belavigne, whose repertoire is famous.
Mme. is quite well known, especially for her rendition of a melody, 'One Sweetly
Solemn Thought,' 'Carry Me Back to Ole Virginia.'

''The crystal glows with a bustle and hurry of excitement. There are flowers,
gay evening gowns, gentlemen in conventional black, and in the midst of a mad
company of revelers, Sarah Stansell, resplendent in black lace over green, and pink,
bows.

"In the midst of a warm purple light, I see a fair-haired maid sewing, ceaselessly
sewing. The object is black, sometimes grey and always possessed of a heel and a
toe. Julia Watkins' husband is perfection usuallv, but terribly hard on socks.

"The scene shifts again. There's a business office with desks piled high with
correspondence. Queen in this mad confusion sits Edythe Clark, ever drawing, ever
writing. She sings softly to herself, humming in her work the latest rag. Edythe
always was up-to-date, and now she gives correspondence lessons in dancing.

"I see a little shop away off in a far cold corner. The shop is lighted with tiny
bulbs, and in one corner among curlers, electric smoothing irons, stand Santa Claus'
latest 1925 Christmas tree models. Lin a Parry wires and twists and busily works
away, so that each little kiddie can have a gorgeous, brilliant tree for Christmas
morning.

"I see a tiny chap in a quaint little gown. There are books 'ranged here, there
and everywhere around the musty old walls. But the bookshop keeper is quite up
with the times and has one compartment, all separate and marked in huge letters
as 'Best Sellers.' Among these, gorgeous in a red and green cover, is a thick volume
entitled : 'How I fix my hair and why I can't puff it over the ears,' by Frances Char-
lotte Markley. There's an excellent illustration on the cover the author perfectly
coiffed and with a huge jade comb in her hair. In close proximity with the book on
hair dressing is found a charming little book entitled 'Poems of Passion,' by Mariwil
Hanes. The record for the sale of this volume is quite phenomenal.

"Again I see footlights winking in a dim theatre. Juliet is telling a devoted
Romeo to 'deny his father and refuse his name.' Romeo seems on the point of doing
it; he would do anything for Marguerite Cousins. You see they've been married for
such a little while!

"The globe takes on a dull brown cast. I see a study, dimly lighted and deeply
silent. In the midst of the gloom sits a woman, busily writing, writing, writing.
Her face is solemn, her eyes dream, and as she looks up I recognize Eleanor Gordon.
She's revising the third edition of her great work, Why Autogeny Repeats Philogeny,
and Vice Versa.'

"Great crowds of people are pictured in the globe. They move steadily in one
direction. Their destination is the Decatur movie, for scattered broadcast through-
out the village are glaring notices, "Come see Mack Sennett's Latest Success, Pearl
Lowe Hamner in Owed to Olivia: The crowd surges to the appointed place, at-
tracted by the music as well as the play. For Mme. Cora Connett now directs the
orchestra, and great is the noise that she makes. They say she is ever chewing gum
to keep time.

"I see a hurrying figure speeding toward a business firm. Evidently the time for
opening was some few minutes ago. Annie Hart is afraid she will lose her job
then she'd have to get married and end it all. She's satisfied now; she likes her job,
for the Chief Kidder in Klassy Klothes Kompany is a new and charming position.
"The scene changes again. I see a street violinist making her way down the street
surrounded by children who insistently point to the violin. 'Say, can't yer do that
ergin?' Lucile complies she had a cheerful disposition and presently her own pet
giggle, exactly reproduced on her violin, rises above the street noises.

"The globe is gay with circus lights. The mob sways this way and that, as each
new attraction appears before the public eye. But the power behind the tents only
sits and watches. What else can a circus flunkee do? But some day the name of
Ellen Wilson will be famous as the most daring tight rope walker in captivity.

"I see a sweet little home in a village. There's a tiny brick walk that leads up to a
vine covered veranda, which makes a beautiful frame for the charming picture
there. Isabel Carr is waving him 'good-bye.' You see, Isabel was a visiting
housekeeper and decided one moonlight night to take the job permanently.

"The scene changes to a vaudeville stage. It's almost time for Marianna Caw-
thonovitch the 'venturous ventriloquist,' to appear. Suddenly a crash, and the
little ballet dancer's ankle is sprained. What could be done? Marianna, the hu-
man wonder, takes her place, ballet costume and applause. She now has a perma-
nent contract.

"The globe shows a dull grey light. Busy little insects crawl here and there, bent
on destruction. But, ever patient, clad in the concave glasses and burning the mid-
night oil, is Mary Robb Finney, trying out her new remedy for the eradication of
book-worms.

"An organ grinder comes down the street. She's clad in gay colors green and
red and the buttons on her jacket shine with more than oriental splendor! But why
not? Aren't Elizabeth Enloe and her monkey head of the International Organ
Grinders' Association?

"There's a little house on a side street in a distant city. There are fresh, new cur-
tains at the window and a welcoming smile for Jim every night as he comes horne.
You see, Nelle Francis decided no one was good enough for the 'Ego Anio Te she
had practiced for so many years, and now she and Jim have quite a nice little home
and all the amoe the Latin books hold.

"The globe shows a strange land. There's ice and snow and the world seems
wrapped in a silent white stillness. There is only one sign of life. Helen Wayt,
clad in furs and wintry garments, has almost completed her campaign for the S. P.
I. E. A. Society for the Promotion of Inter-Eskimo Athletics.

"I see a shrewd lawyer sitting at her desk. There's a young couple standing be-
fore her. The husband is sullen and the wife is weeping. Emily is talking for
hasn't she a right to? The sign on her door gives her permission: 'Emily Hutter,
Get 'Em Together Lawyer. Quick Job.'

"There's a funny old boarding house at Crabtown-by-the-Sea. Martha has been
there two years and she's just got another to wait before he comes in from his cruise.
You see, long time ago, when Martha was Martha Laing, she made 4-0 at the Hops,
acquired an additional name, and is now holding her own with the cats in the
boarding house, until he gets back.

"The scene changes and I see a foreign land. There are students this way and
that, hurrying classes and jabbering in an unknown tongue. But it's not unknown
to Lois Compton. You see, little about French escaped her in college and when the
opportunity to go to the Sorbonne came, Lois Compton packed her glad rags and
departed for France.

Theres a color of cream and a scent of violet which rises from the opaque globe.
In the middle stands Janef, better known now as Mile. Janef Preston, of the Curl 'Em
Up Beauty Parlors. She's clad in a white crepe de chine apron and her golden hair
proves her prowess and dexterity in the use of curlers. They say she got her in-
spiration from Buddy.

"Through the luxurious gloom of a French shop, I see a beautiful young model
trailing silks and satins over velvet carpets. She has the grace of a young Venus
and the most marvelous side puffs on her hair. Marguerite Watkins is much the same.

"Standing high on cotton bales is Theressa Newton. She waves a broad farm
hat and madly gesticulates to the crowd of dark faces below^ Occasionally she
points to the bales before her and looks sadly at the hat she waves in her hand
far different from the 1921 model she used to wear. Posters near-by tell the tale:
'Hear Miss Theressa Newton on the Price of Cotton and How to Raise It.'

There is an atmosphere of hurry that shoots through the globe. People dart this
way and that in a mad determination to save time. But the greatest time-saver
of all is Thelma Brown. She has a great work before her a great field and she
must hurry and get it done. Her lectures on the 'Immensity of the Universe in
Ten Minutes' are famous.

"A long, tall figure is seen in the globe. Her bushy bobbed locks stand out in the
same charming way as they did when she first cut them. Augusta is posing. \ou
see, she has her picture in all the magazines as 'After Taking.' The 'New \ork
Latest Methods for Reducing' pay her a huge salary.

"There's a long procession of moving trucks coming down the street. They seem
to be carrying books, or rather manv copies of the same book. Caroline Agee had
gathered all the poems and stories she wrote when she was twelve years old and
the sale of them has been phenomenal.

"The globe grows bright with a cheerful light. Crowds of happy faces gather
around a central figure. Now and then a storm of applause breaks out. The
employees in Bell's Overall Factory are always delighted when Peg Hedrick comes
down to sing and dance for them.

"A hungry throng gazes intently through a restaurant window. The steaming hot
dishes attract the public eye, but not so much as does a certain waitress. Her eyes

are upturned as her dainty hand reaches for a tip. The tip is generous, you may
be sure, for Helen Hall is awfully popular with the patrons, and Childs' is famous
for its popular waitresses.

"I see a regal procession moving down the street. The Prince of Wales is out
for his noonday ride. The eager people press hard on either side. The mounted
officers are vainly trying to silence a certain individual, but their efforts are vam, be-
cause Eleanor Carpenter must know just one important fact about the Prince. Ac-
cordingly over the confusion she shouts: 'Say, Prince, do you use Kum-apart cuff
links? They're the latest fad in America!'

"The globe shows a far-off land. Vast stretches of sand lie baked in the noon-
day sun. It's very hot and the little savages are very tired. But Eulas' not, and
every now and then she runs up to a group lazily eating cocoanuts under a palm
tree and demands in an excited voice, 'Can't you really come out for hockey a lit-
tle while this morning? You ought to help your class, you know.'

"I see a doctor's office. White walls and curtains are unrelieved save by the rain-
bow glint of the shining instruments. There are a crowd of little orphans waiting in
the ante-room and as each little youngster comes in the doctor a famous lady by
the name of Fan McCaa has a kind word for every one of them. Fan's become
quite famous for several wonderful operations on club feet and spinal troubles.

"Huge electric lights blaze the name of Mary Louise Green through the semi-
darkness of the Broadway midnight. The theatre is thronged with a happy, chat-
tering crowd, making amused comments on the play. The concensus of opinion
places Mary Louise as the cleverest sunshine bit of the year as a Pie Fight performer.

"The globe grows rosy with a cheerful glow. Dot's in the habit of making things
o-low and now her tea room for the cannibals in the South Sea islands is famous.
She has the cash register and all. Dot turned missionary only after she married a
man with seven brothers. Then the cannibals made a stronger appeal. Dots
used to large families, you know.

"The scene changes. I see a dimly lighted shop. There are dusty costumes hang-
ing here and there and a general air of age and antiquity broods over the place.
But the shopkeeper is not old. Her athletic prowess is as great as ever, but she deals
in antiquity as she did in college and has opened a costume shop for the Rornan s
and Miss Smith's benefit. They say 'Floding's continues to supply Agnes Scott
with costumes free of charge.

"The doctor quickly mounts the steps. She's a business-like young woman of
about twenty-five and her growing practice is a source of great satisfaction to her
friends. The Medical Journals are full of the name of Sarah McCurdy, the woman
who rediscovered the young girls' ears, lost for ten years to public view.

"The globe grows black. I see a dark night the moon is covered by a thick
cloud a storm is imminent. But little does Detective Fluker care for the un-
friendliness of the elements. She is tracing the clue that will break the record tor
any D. T. work yet filed. She has almost discovered that she cannot ring.

"In a little back street theatre, Sarah Fulton is making a name for herself. She
moved from Decatur soon after she graduated and arrived in Paris the next winter,
where she put in several months with one of the best musical giggle masters to be
procured. She developed her latent abilities and now has the leading juvenile part
in the recent musicale hit, '/ Want a Daddy; Her chief solo is 'Everybody Loves a
Baby.' , J

"I see a huge city school in New York. It is time for the music hour and great
is the confusion. The music master enters. It is Genie Johnson, better known as
the most famous golf champion of the world, who renounced her fame that she might
teach all little school boys to sing in the choir and be good Episcopalians.

^,

"The scene changes. There's a dusty highway, and many fine touring cars pass
every minute. But walking down the road is Amiee D. Glover and her corps of
trained elephants. They are going to give an exhibition at Marietta tonight. It's
even rumored that Miss Leoate from Agnes Scott is coming over for the performance,
for long ago she was instrumental in teaching Amiee D. the secret of training ele-
phants. Speak to them in French.

"I see a beautiful countr)' club. Graceful couples dance to the orchestra and
the scene is gay with lights and frivolous laughter. In the center is the honoree.
Miss Dorothy Havis, who is still a sponsor and is now holding office in the behalf
of the Amalgamated Day Students of the World."

With this alarming news, the globe resumed its normal opalescence. Madame
rose from her position behind the crystal and disappeared into the next room. The
incense burned out and I was left to muse upon what I had heard and marvel at the
strange and diverse occupations of my college friends.

My reverie was sadly broken up by the arrival of gasoline and lunch, and after
supplying the plane with the former and ourselves with the latter, we were ready to
resume our journey. We turned to thank Madame for her "information." and found
instead of the Turkish mystic an American woman who told us she had been making
a great deal of money among the inhabitants who had come to look upon her as a
part of their religion. She waved us good-bye as the plane began its graceful ascent
toward the heavens. However, both of us had reached the "Seventh Heaven" some
time ago, and we concluded also that "all's right with" 1921.

Rachel Rushton, Class Prophet.

ICast iitU anil pstamfttt nf t\}t (UlaaB of 1921

E, the undersigned members of the Class of Nineteen Hundred and
Twenty-One, having stood the test of four years of college life, do
hereby bequeath to the entire college the solemn duty and privilege of
preserving the honored traditions of our beloved college, and of cher-
ishing that intangible, yet indispensable force, college spirit; and to
the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two we bequeath our collective gifts and
attractions, to be used for the purpose of attaining the heights gained by us.

Article 1. We do hereby renounce any and all wills made heretofore.

Article 2. I, Caroline Agee, do bequeath my love of friendly lecturing to
Mary McClellan, suggesting that by a proper use thereof many embarrassing situa-
tions may be avoided.

Article 3. I, Dorothy Allen, do leave little Minnie to the tender mercies of Ruth
Keiser, knowing that such an arrangement will result both gracefully and artistically.

Article 4. I, Charlotte Bell, realizing the many coup d'etats which I have made
with my unfailing poise, and my unwavering self-possession in the face of all cir-
cumstances, do hereby bequeath said advantages to Elizabeth A. Brown, knowing they
will be valuable to her on many occasions, especially during Blackfriar try outs.

Article 5. I, Margaret Bell, being of an amiable inquisitiveness, do will my
love of repeating all available knowledge to the student body, knowing that it will be
more effectively disseminated in that manner; and my tender regards for Miss Alex-
ander to Sarah Till, realizing that I need offer no suggestions how to use them.

Article 6. I, Myrtle Blackmon, do will my place on the hockey team of four
years' standing to Julia Jameson, knowing that she would enjoy such mild sports
after recovering from the stiffness occasioned thereby.

Article 7. I, Augusta Brewer, do hereby will, without any compromise or con-
dition entailed therein, my Irene Castle locks and my Vogue gowns to Alice Whipple,
knowing that clever clothes are advantageous to all women.

Article 8. I, Thelma Brown, do leave my chair in the tea room to Nelle
Buchanan, advising her that doughnuts are cheapest and most filling.

Article 9. I, Eleanor Blake Carpenter, with much sorrow do hereby relinquish
my valiant efforts to run the French Department to Helen Barton with special em-
phasis on all claims at Emory. The privilege of rooming at "Five Points" with all
the peace and quiet entailed therein, I leave to future occupants of 21 Inman.

Article 10. I, Isabel Carr, glorying in my ability to do nothing with an unprec-
edented ease and grace, do will said ability to Lucy Wooten with the fond hope
that it will add much dignity to her senior year.

Article 11. I, Lois Compton, do bequeath my excellence in French to Otto Gil-
bert, urging her to practice in private with phonograph records as I have done for
the past few years.

Article 12. I, Charlotte Newton, do will my poetical nature to Margaret
Colville; my place at the library desk I leave to those who never return their books
on time.

Article 13. I, Theressa Newton, do hereby will the question which ever returns,
'What can we do?' to future business managers of college publications.

Article 14. I, Lina Parry, do bestow upon Alice Virden the entire responsi-
bility for keeping in touch with the Decatur Episcopal church, also explaining all
matters pertaining thereto.

Article 15. I, Janef Preston, do will my ability to make speeches, both extem-
poraneous, conciliatory and visionary, to Alice Louise Travis, and my efficiency
to future presidents of the Y. W. C. A.

Article 16. I, Rachel Rushton, do hereby will my naivete, the outgrowth of a
superb sophistication, to Jennye Hall. All future mention of the captain and the
ring "to be worn only at night" I leave to college gossip.

Article 17. I, Anna Marie Landress, do bestow upon Edith Kerns my propen-
sity for making student volunteer speeches under any and all circumstances; and my
numerous positions as secretary and treasurer I affectionately leave to my little sister.

Article 18. I, Marian Lindsay, do will my care of the Freshmen and my in-
tense love of the classical to Harriet Scott, with the assurance that the double re-
sponsibility will keep her out of all trouble.

Article 19. I, Jean McAlister, do hereby bequeath my place in the Senior choir
to Louie Dean Stephens, confiding that from the left side of the front row one can
see most.

Article 20. I, Fannie McCaa, do will my fondness for Spanish to all those who
come after me, my biological aspirations I will to Lois Polhill.

Article 21. L Sarah McCurdy, do will my Stone Mountain trips to my two
little sisters, Sarah and Mary; and my way with frat pins I bequeath to Frances Stokes.

Article 22. I, Margaret McLaughlin, do will both my athletic glory and my
musical ability to Althea Stephens, knowing that under her supervision they will
become a strong force in the community.

Article 23. 1, Frances Charlotte Markley, do hereby bequeath my blue scarf to
Mary Knight, thinking she may enjoy a change of color; my ready laugh to Elizabeth
Wilson, and my journalistic aspirations to K. U. B.

Article 24. I, Vienna Mae Murphy, do will my pleasure at being in weddings,
especially of other people, to Ivelyn Girardeau.

Article 25. I, Martha Stansfield, do hereby will my profound regrets that I did
not pursue the study of Anglo-Saxon to Ruth Evans, to Frances Stuart I will my un-
swerving allegiance to the Latin Department.

Article 26. I, Amy Twitty, do will my future fortune to the maintenance of the
phone pad in Main, considering how faithful it has been to me during mv four years
in college. My love for the navy I leave to Mary Floding, knowing that she will
treat such love with due respect.

Article 27. I, Dorothy Havis, do will my position of sponsor with all the trips
to Texas it might involve to Edythe Davis, hoping that she may gain great pleasure
and profit thereby.

Article 28. L Margaret Ifedrick, do will my permanent Marcelle, my bushy
hair and my secret formula for hair tonic, to Laura Oliver. Rub well, my girl !

Article 29. I, Emily Hutter, being assured by one who knows that I am the
"Belle of Agnes Scott," do hereby bequeath my dates and dinners to Elizabeth
Nichols, knowing that it will be an advantage to her in her studies of nature.

Article 30. I, Marion Cawthon, do hereby will my baby voice to Helen Faw,
hoping that under her direction it may cause much amusement.

Article 31. I, Helen Hall, knowing the boundless joy which attends a sponsor
at Tech, do hereby will to Lilburne Ivey my killing ways which have gained for me
the aforementioned position.

Article 32. I, Pearl Lowe Hamner, realizing that I have allowed my dramatic
talent to lie dormant for too long, do hereby will said talent to Charlotte Keesler,
trusting that by her it will be used to best advantage; also to her I will my inno-
cence and lack of sophistication.

cq2)]-v--^

H:

Article 33. I, Mariwil Hanes, do will my winning smile and my luxuriant hair
to Susie Mims.

Article 34. I, Eleanor Gordon, do will my natural yet colorful complexion to
Jerry Goodroe, hoping that it will save much of her allowance otherwise used for
cosmetics.

Article 35. I, Alice Jones, being possessed of a large group of family, relatives
and friends at Commencement, do will to each girl on second floor Inman the espe-
cial care of one relative or friend, hoping thereby to obtain the maximum amount of
entertainment for them with least effort.

Article 36. I, Mary Ann Justice, restraining all ideas of higher things which
might enter into this discussion, do hereby bequeath my philosophical, psychological
and biological ideas to Virginia Pottle; to the girls of Converse College, I en-
trust my friend. Dr. White.

Article 37. I, Mary Louise Greene, do bequeath to Roberta Love my quiet, re-
tiring disposition and my interest in Emory students. To all envious underclassmen
I leave my gift of getting to breakfast on time.

Article 38. L Marguerite Watkins, do hereby bequeath my intense love for
the Freshmen in Main to Ruth Virden, knowing that her originality will stand her in
good stead when it is necessary to get them to bed on time.

Article 39. L Sarah Harrison, do will my extreme worry over my work to Gena
Calloway; to her also I will my slowness, and to future students majoring in History
my fond regard for Miss Hearon.

Article 40. I, Eugenia Johnston, do hereby will my ancestors, especially John
Randolph of Roanoke, to Ellen French, giving her the hint that they are useful
both in conversation and interior decorating.

Article 4L I, Martha Laing, do will to Laurie Bell Stubbs my 4-0 bid to
Annapolis, hoping that she will fill my place in a popular and entrancing manner.

Article 42. I, Julia Saunders, having had no class standing for the past three
years, do bequeath to the Admission and Electives Committees all the sorrows
and inconveniences caused thereby.

Article 43. I, Lucile Smith, do give by will, my fondness for faculty coffee to
Cama Burgess; my propensity for giggling even in the midst of dramatic productions
I leave to Martha Taliaferro.

Article 44. I. Sarah Stansell, will to the Endowment Fund my gold mine, which
has caused me much excitement in the past; to Ruth Hall I leave my retiring, quiet
and gentle disposition.

Article 45. I, Margaret Wade, do leave my brazen and forward manner to
Marion Hull with the suggestion that it be used to procure the profound admiration
of underclassmen.

Article 46. I, Louise Fluker, not being able to fall in love, do bequeath the
A. T. 0. Freshman at Tech to the tender mercies of Caroline Moore, knowing well
her fondness for said fraternity.

Article 47. I, Anne Hart, having had much experience during the past four
years, do will my killing way with the teachers and my ability to bluff throug'h
any course on the campus to Ethel Ware, since circumstances show that she could
use said gifts to advantage.

Article 48. I, Eula Russell, do relinquish my red Senior light with much sor-
row to Juanita Kelly; also to her I leave my neat ways and unfailing modesty.

Article 49. I, Clotile Spence, do will my good nature and my ability to avoid
work with ease and grace to Mary Catherine McKinney, believing that she will use
such gifts with becoming modesty.

Article 50. I, Julia Watkins, do leave to Eunice Dean my week-end visitors
from Birmingham; and my prospects for matrimony I leave to Julia McCuIlough.

Article 51. I, Helen Wayt, bequeath hereby my sleepless vigilance in study to
Lucia Murchison, being certain that she will remember "studium sibi merces est."

Article 52. I, Frances Whitfield, do will my much-admired beauty and my
cultured hands to Mary Wliarton, with the advice that natural beauty is more than
skin deep.

Article 53. I, Ellen Wilson, do hereby bequeath to Ruth Laughon my serious
disposition; my energy to Annie Mae Strickland, with the hope that the results
will astonish the community.

Article 54. I, Elizabeth Enloe, do will my eye for business and my love for the
study of chirography to Catherine Dennington, knowing that a good combination of
the two will result in satisfying visits to the tea room.

Article 55. I, Mary R. Finney, do will my way with men to Susie Reid Morton,
with the advice that several will write even more letters than one.

Article 56. I, Elizabeth Floding, do will my nine hours of recreation per day
to Joy Trump, and to Frances White my complete indifference to boys, knowing that
it is the only sure way to have a career.

Article 57. I, Sarah Fulton, do leave my blushes in class and my composed
manner on the stage to Ruth Scandrett, since a combination of the two will prove
most advantageous to her when speaking before large audiences.

Article 58. I, Aimee D. Glover, do will my fiery temperament and vivacious
manner to Mary Barton, certain that she will use them even more effectively than I
have employed them.

Article 59. I, Edythe Clark, do hereby will to Frances Harper my proficiency
in and my great love for mathematics, trusting she will guard the use of such pro-
ficiency as may be desirable. To Jeanette Archer, I leave my boundless store of
jokes, hoping that she may be able to find others to add to it.

Article 60. I, Cora Connett, do will mv ability of breaking into Atlanta society
to Emma Proctor, as well as my nomadic ideas of life.

Article 61. I, Marguerite Cousins, bequeath my charming personality, my
ability to star in Blackfriar productions and my delightful way of talking in
public to Susan Malone.

Article 62. I, Nelle Frances Daye, appreciating keenly the zest which romance
adds to college life, do hereby renounce all claims to Jimmy he has worn well
throughout all four years and will him to Ruth Pirkle, trusting that she can
amuse him as well as I have.

This instrument was signed, sealed and declared by the Class of 1921, this
thirtieth day of May, Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One, as their last will and
testament.

Frances Charlotte Markley, Testator.

Witnesses: Evelyn Byrd, Frances Stuart.

Q2

Alma Mntn

When far from the reach of thy sheltering arms.

The band of thy daughters shall roam,

sail their hearts shall enshrine thee.

Thou crown of the South,

With the memory of youth that has flown.

Dear guide of our youth,

Whose spirit is truth.

The love of our girlhood is thine.

Alma Mater, whose name we revere and adore,

May thy strength and thy power ne'er decline.

Agnes Scott, ivhen thy campus and halls rise to mind.

With the bright college scenes from our past.

Our regret is that those years can ne'er return more.

And we sigh that such joys could not last

Wherever they are

Thy daughters afar

Shall bow at the sound of thy name.

And with reverence give thanks

For the standard that's thine,

And the noble ideal that's thy aim.

And when others besides us thy portals shall throng.

Think of us ivho have gone on before.

And the lesson that's 'graven deep into our hearts

Thou shalt 'grave on ten thousand and more.

Fair symbol of light.

The purple and ivhite.

Which in purity adds to thy fame.

Knowledge shall be thy shield.

And thy fair coat-of-arms,

A record without blot or shame.

1 U U C 1 1

C92)^

dluntor OIlaBB

Mary McLellan
Lucia Murchison
Gena Callaway

OFFICERS

President

Vice-President

Secretary-Treasurer

Cama Burgess

Ruth Virden

Julia Jameson

Archer, Jeanette
Barton, Helen
Barton, Mary
Buchanan, Eleanor
Burgess, Cama
Calloway. Gena
CoLviLLE, Margaret
Dean, Eunice
Dennincton, Catherlne
Floding, Mary Edna
French, Ellen
Gilbert, Otto
Hall. Ruth
Hall, Jexnye Alice
Harper, Frances
Hauch. Catherine
Hull. Marian
Ivey, Lilburne

MEMBERS

Jameson, Julia
Keesler, Charlotte
Keiser, Ruth
Kelly, Juanita
Kerns, Edith
Kmcht. Mary
Love, Roberta
Lauchon. Ruth
Malone, Susan
Moore, Carolyn
Murchison, Lucia
McCuLLOUcH, Julia
McKiNNEY, Mary C.
McLellan, Mary
Nichols, Elizabeth
Oliver. Frances
PiRKLE. Ruth J.

Pottle, Virginia
Proctor, Emma

SCANDRETT, RuTH

Stephens. Louie Dean
Stokes, Frances
Strickland, Annie Mae
Stubbs, Laura Belle
Taliaferro, Martha
Till, Sara
Trump. Esther Joy
Virden, Ruth
Ware, Ethel
Wharton, Mary
Whipple, Alice
White, Frances
Wilson, Elizabeth
WooTEN, Lucy

JEANETTE ARCHER

"Jimmy"

MONTREAT, N. C.

^^ Worth, courage, honor, these indeed
Your sustenance and birthright are."

HELEN BARTON

Sewanee, Tenn.

"/ met an Emory man one day.
His countenance all downcast.
'Sewanee's belle is a bride,' he said,
'And Sewanee's joy is past.' "

MARY BARTON

Sewanee, Tenn.

"Her looks do argue her replete with
modesty."

ELIZABETH A. BROWN

"Brownie"

Fort Valley, Ga.

"If hat then remains, but well our power
to use.
And keep good humor still, whate'er we
lose?"

NELL BUCHANAN

"Buck"

Marion, Va.

"Her smile was prodigal of summery
shine
Gaily persistent like a morn in June."

CAMA BURGESS
Atlanta, Ga.

"Hail, independence, hail! heaven's next

best gift
To that of life and immortal soul!"

92)

GENA CALLAWAY
Augusta, Ga.

"Our hands are full of bu:iness: let's
away."

MARGARET COLVILLE

McMlNNVILLE, TeNN.

hen she speaks, she knows whereof she
speaks."

EUNICE DEAN

"An"
Anderson, S. C.

"Correct with spirit, eloquent with ease.
Intent to reason, or polite to pleaze."

CATHERINE BENNINGTON

"Katie"

Atlanta, Ga.

"A truer, nobler, trustier heart.
More loving, or more loyal, never beat
Within a human breast."

RUTH EVANS
Fort Valley, Ga.

"Where ignoranc? is bliss,
'Tis folly to be ivise."

MARY FLODING
Atlanta, Ga.

"In each cheek appears a pretty dimple;
Love made those hollows."

ELLEN FRENCH

"Frenchie"

Cascade, Va.

"She lives content, and envies none, not
even a monarch on his throned

OTTO GILBERT

"Ot"

Atlanta. Ga.

"Bright as the sun her eyes the gazers
strike.
And like the sun they shine on all alike."

IVYLYN GIRARDEAU
Thomaston, Ga.

"For if she loill, she will, and you may

depend on't;
And if she wont, she wont, and there's
an end on't."

JENNYE HALL
Atlanta. Ga.
"Hon' charming is divine philosophy.

RUTH HALL

"Tootsie"
Laurel, Miss.

"No wild enthusiast ever yet could rest
Till half mankind ivere like himself pos-
sess'd."

FRANCES HARPER

Germantovvn, Pa.

"There is a pleasure in poetic pains
U'hich only poets know."

MARIAN HULL

"Punkin"

Atlanta, Ga.

"f // of dignity and common sense, mostly
dignity."

CATHERINE HAUGH
Atlanta, Ga.

"Her eyes, fair eyes, like to the purest lights
That animate the sun or cheer the day."

LILBURNE IVEY

"Lil."'
Evergreen, Ala.

"The glittering tresses which, now shaken
loose,
Shower'd gold."

JULIA JAMESON
Franklin, Tenn.

'To spend too much -time in studies is
sloth."

CHARLOTTE KEESLER

"Lot"

Greenwood, Miss.

"The glass of fashion, and the mould of
form.
The observed of all observers."

RUTH REISER

"Rufus"

Birmingham, Ala.

"When you do dance, I wish you
A ivave o' the sea, that you might ever do
Nothing hut that."

JUANITA KELLY

"Nita"
Augusta, Ga.

"Her heart as far from fraud as heaven
from earth."

EDITH KERNS

'Percy"

Charleston, W. Va.

"Strong souls
Live like fire-heated suns, to spend their
strength
In furthest striving action."

MARY KNIGHT
Atlanta, Ga.

"The stage I chose a subject fair and

free
'Tis yours ."

RUTH LAUGHON
Pulaski, Va.

"All who joy would loin
Must share it Happiness was born a

ROBERTA LOVE
"Bert"

LiNCOLNTON, N. C.

"How sweet must be the lips that guard
that tongue."

MARY CATHERINE McKINNEY

"Kit"
Ripley, Tenn.
"Jf hen in doubt, keep on talking."

(Q2

MARY McLELLAN
Dalton, Ga.

"Siveet promptings into kindest deeds
Were in her very look."

SUSAN MALONE
Greenwood, Miss.

"/ ought to have my own way in every-
thing.
And ivhat's more, I will, too."

CAROLYN MOORE

EuFAULA, Ala.

'To dance ivas ever her delight."

LUCIA MURCHISON

"Baby'"

Columbia, S. C.

'To be merry best becomes thee; for ivith-

out doubt.
You were born in a merry hour."

ELIZABETH NICHOLS
'Lib"
Griffin. Ga.
''Gentle of spirit, beneficent of mind."

FRANCES OLIVER

Plains, Ga.

"Of manners gentle, of affections mild."

LAURA OLIVER

Montgomery. Ala.

"How sweet and gracious, even in common

speech
Is that fine sense ichich men call cour-
tesy."

RUTH PIRKLE

"Pickle"
Buffalo, Te>'>.

"Trace science then ; with modesty thy
guide."

LOIS POLHILL
Louisville. Ga.

"Rare compound of oddity, frolic and fun
Jfho relished a joke and rejoiced in a
pun."

VIRGINIA POTTLE

"Pot"
Albany, Ga.

"A happy soul, the best of good company."

EMMA PROCTOR

"Em"
College Park. Ga.

"Happily to steer . . .
From grave to gay, from lively to severe.'

MARGARET SMITH

"Bobs"

Athens, Ala.

'Tis well thy soul shakes off its load of
care."

RUTH SCANDRETT
"Rellie"

CORDELE, Ga.

"In arguing too, she showed great skill.
For even though vanquished, she could
argue still."

MERLE SELLERS
Samson, Ga.

'^Your gentleness shall force.
More than your force moves u> to gentle-
ness."

HARRIET SCOTT

Tazewell, Ala.

"She hath a smile for every soul she meets.'

LOUIE DEAN STEPHENS

'"Loo"

Woodstock, La.

"Talking, knowing not lohy, caring not
what."

ALTHEA STEPHENS

''Steve"
Jacksonville, Fla.

'A good sportswoman she.
Doth with her whole heart play the game."

ANNIE MAE STRICKLAND
Stilson, Ga.
"Sioeetness and patience crown the gentle
maid."

LAURA BELLE STUBBS

"Stubbie"

Eastman. Ga.

"She draweth out the thread of her ver-
bosity
Finer than the staple oj her argument."

MARTHA TALIAFERRO

"Mart"
Evergreen, Ala.

"Demure and quiet is she and yet me-
thinks
There's something more beneath."

SARAH TILL

"Red"
Fayette, Miss.

"A charm she hath more potent than her
beauty,
.4 never jailing power of being gay."

LUCY TIMMERMAN
"Tim"

SUMPTER, S. C.

'The deepest hunger of a faithful heart
faithfulness."

ALICE LOUISE TRAVIS
Covington, Ga.
"Modesty is the grace of the soul."

JOY TRUMP

"Trumpet"
Tuscumbia, Ala.

"Or light, or dark, or short or tall.
She sets a spring to cnare them all.'

RUTH VIRDEN

CviNTHIA, TeNN.

"She gives herself to every cause that she
upholds.
And that's the greatest gift oj all."

ETHEL K. WARE
Decatur, Ga.

"She is as constant as the stars
That never vary ."

MARY WHARTON

Greenwood, S. C.

"Maximum results, iiith minimum efforts'

ALICE WHIPPLE

CORDELE, Ga.

"Happy am I; from cares I'm free!
Why aren't they all contented like me?"

FRANCES WHITE
Atlanta, Ga.

"Half our knowledge we must snatch, not
take."

ELIZABETH WILSON

Atlanta, Ga.

"/ never dare to ivrite as funny as I can."

LUCY WOOTEN
Covington, Ga.

"A foot more light, a step more true
Ne'er from the heath-flower dashed the
dew."

dimttnr OIkBH f o?m

Three years ago we launched our bark

Upon an unknown sea,
Naught we knew of the seaman's craft
And we mocked the little waves that laughed

As they tossed our skiff in glee.

Oh! the waves grew dark as the shore grew dim

And deep were the waters there.
The winds arose and our sails were torn
And tve were often iveary-worn

From toil and dreary care.

But we never lost hope and we never turned back,

And the clouds soon passed away;
And we mended the rent and sailed along
To the joyous lilt of the victor s song

In the calm of another day.

We can see the lights of the harbor now;

Our goal is almost tvon!
Another year and we reach that land
Of infinite joys to the soul of man

Where wonderful ivorks are done.

Oh, we are eager to gain the port;

The breezes are wafting us nearer.
Eager, yet sad! Though bright is the shore
The paths of the sea %ve have travelled o'er

To the sailor's heart are dearer.

Laura Oliver, Class Poet.

litatnrij of % QUasa nf 192^

N the early fall of 1918 there was heard a timid rapping on the stately
portals of Agnes Scott. "Opportunity is knocking at our door," some
optimistic person said and hastened to unbolt the great locks. Her
trivial remark was quite true, for there on the steps stood the class of
'22, visibly embarrassed and quivering (with cold, not fear). Rather
dubious and nonchalant to be sure, but befitting their dignity the old girls took
advantage of the opportunity offered them, and thereby rendered their Alma Mater
an inestimable service, for what would Agnes Scott do without the class of '22?
Perish the thought! With condescending smiles and benevolent words, they ushered
us in and we, fully realizing that at least a hundred curious eyes were staring at our
physiognomy, awkwardly stumbled over our new suit cases and tried to pretend
for the benefit of the audience that going off to college was an every-day occurrence
in our lives. "Nothing exceptional about them," observed the critical Sophomore,
glorying in her new privileges. "Did we look anything like that when we were
Freshmen?" sighed the blase Senior. "I verily believe Freshmen get plainer and
younger every year." The verdict then was that '22 was a nonentity.

This wounded our vanity, for we thought that Agnes Scott would sit up and take
notice when we arrived. We believed, of course, that we were a most exceptional
and gifted class, but it appeared that no one shared our belief. With a fearful
qualm within, but a forced smile without, we endured the atrocities of Sophomore
week and wrote voluminous descriptive letters home with kodak pictures to illustrate
our altered appearances. Sympathetic mother sent a box and father a check. And
then at the end of this nerve-racking week, we found a friend indeed the Bronze
Cat. ( Dumb animals have always been known to have a rare power of recognizing
good people when they see them. ) This muchly sought-after kitty has a reputation
for associating exclusively with clever and original classes so when she made her
choice everybody opened wide their eyes and agreed that we weren't so plain and
young after all really quite pretty and clever. Then in our Sophomore year, when
the Bronze Cat purred contentedly that she was perfectly happy and satisfied where
she was and saw no need for changing her affections, then at last the unbelievers
fully realized what we had told them from the very beginning, for no class in the
history of Agnes Scott ever before won the cat two years in succession.

Next we turned our attention to athletics and found a way to work off our excess
of pep without being "shooed." If this were fiction I could tell you how the poor
little Freshies routed the invincible Sophomores on the hockey field and threw so
many goals in the basket-ball games that the referee lost count, but this is history
(a narrative of facts) and not a fairy tale. Frankly, from our Freshman year on
up, we have never been especially brilliant in hockey (we're too tender-hearted), but
at the few games that victory smiled on us we made enough noise and celebrated
sufficiently to tide us over all those that we lost. We won half of the athletic cups

last year because we tied with the Juniors for the athletic honors of the year, and
the tennis double championship belonged to us. Our success in the gym and track
meet proves that we use our arms and legs just as gracefully and skillfully as we
do our heads.

Then in the course of events and studies, we passed from the horrors and disillu-
sions of Trig, and Biology Lat. (alas, some of us did not pass) into the lofty and
more comfortable heights of Soc. and Philosophy and became Juniors. With be-
coming dignity we grandmothered the Freshmen and began to think of the serious
things of life, such as making Hoose and Gamma Tau, and keeping step with the
"Ancient of Days." But our thoughts cannot dwell long in the future, for the
present calls for so much action. We have not King Midas' touch of gold, but
we have the next thing to it a touch of silver. When we lend our presence to
plays, bazaars, cabarets, parties, etc., behold immediately much silver. There have
been Juniors before us and there will be Juniors after us, but we think there never
will be any Juniors like those of the class of '22. We are determined to make our
Junior circus, Junior banquet and Junior everything a little bit better than the
preceding ones, so when we join the ranks of "those who have gone on before (we
always have a stain-glass window feeling when we sav those words), we will leave
some good size footprints behind us.

Elizabeth Wilson, Historian.

OIkss f fUa

SENIOR.

1234
3214

Who for,

What for,
Who're you going to yell for?

Seniors

1921!

JUNIOR.

j_U N I 0 R

Spell Junior! Junior!
We're the finest on the campus,
There is nothing that can phase us,

J U N I 0 R. You see
We're the class with the rep.
And we've got plenty of pep.

Juniors for me!

SOPHOMORE.

Pe lanky lanky lanky,

Tweedle, weedle, woodle,
Sophomores!

FRESHMEN.

Yell for the Freshmen,

Freshmen must win;
Yell to the finish.

Never give in.
Rah! Rah! Rah!

You do your best, girls,

We'll do the rest, girls.
Yell for the Freshman Class.

TWEEniE-WEEDLE-WOODLE

B>0pl|nmnr? (Elass

OFFICERS
First Semester

Beth McClure President .

Quenelle Harrold ... . . Vice-Prseident .

Margaret McLean Secretary-Treasurer

MEMBERS

Allen, Claua Mae Ham, Mildred

Almond, Ruth Hkkman, Emj/a

Arant, Frances Hannah, Evelyn

Ballard, Martha Harris, Mauy

BowRON, Dorothy Harrold, Quenelle

Brenxee, Margaret Harwell, Anna

BiiODNAx, Sara Bell Harwell, Frances

Brown, Elizabeth H. Hay, Margaret

BuBDM, Virginia Hoke, Elizabeth

Caldwell, Mary W. Hollis, Viola

Campbell, Nannie C. Hyde, Eleanor

Carnes, Maybeth Kincannon, Mary G.

Clark, Minnie Lee Knight, Eloise

Cook, Thelma Knight, Jane

Cooper, .Iessie Dean Lamar, Hazel

Crossland, LiirisE {]. Lewis, Anna

Davis, Edythe I.,ittle, Lucile

DuDD, Eileen Lockhart, Elizabeth

Evans, Christine Ixigan, .Josephine

Evans, Ruth Lowe, Mar.torie

Farquhar, M. Caroline Mims. Susie

Faw, Helen Molloy, Elizabeth

Flake. Elizabeth Moriarty, Lois

Poster, Mafde Murphy, My'rtle

(tAjibrill, Anne McCallie, Edith E.

(tAedner, .Josephine McClure. Elizabeth

OlRARDEAU, IVYLYN MCCONNELL, HILDA

Goodrich, JIary McDougal, Anna H.

GooDROE. Geraldine McIntosh. Martha

GuiLLE, Emily McLean, Ellen

Second Semester

Beth McClure

Charlotte Farquhar

Quenelle Harrold

McLean, Margaret
Ogletuee, Fredbra
Ordway, Virginia
Parham, Elizabeth
Parker, Margaret E.
PoLHiLL, Lois
Posey, Valeria
Pou, Eugenia
Ransom, Elizabeth
Ransom, Margaret
Samuels, Gertrude
Sanders, Ruth
Scott. Harriett
Seaglb, Alma
Sellers, Merle
Shields, Catherine
Sjiith, Margaret
Smith, Pearl
Stone, Polly
'I'Ho-MAs, Emily ,Tulia
Thokixgton, Margaret

TIMMERMAN. lyUCY

Travis, Allib Louise
Turner, Margaret

VtrdEN, i^LICE

Wassum, Eva
Waterfield, Catherine
Watkins, Rosa
Williams, Fanstelle
Wojielsdorf, Margaretta

(92

^iatnrjj of )l)f ffllaHS of 1923

HE arrival of the class of '23 was announced in the Agonistic by the
glaring headlines, " '23 Largest Class Ever Entered at Agnes Scott."
And we are, for on September 17, 1919, there were two hundred and
sixty-four of us who streamed through the main gate. The rest of the
college gasped when they realized our numbers and how full of pep
every one of the two hundred and sixty-four was.

The cruel Sophomores immediately began measuring up for green ribbon, and
before we knew it, the dread Sophomore week was upon us. Then it was we be-
gan to look forward to being Sophomores ourselves, and to set our fertile minds to
work to think up even worse atrocities to perpetrate on '24.

As soon as pigtails gave place to ear-puffs once more, our class organization took
shape, and Polly Stone, Gret Womelsdorf and Mary Caldwell were chosen as our
officers. Under their guiding hands we spent the first year of our college life, and
one we will always look back to with pleasure.

It was during our Freshman year that we started our reputation for hospitality;
the Freshman Surprise Party, given in DecerrJjer, was such a success it was written
up in the Annual. This was followed by two more equally delightful ones in the
Spring.

We are proud of the record we made in athletics as Freshmen. At the close of
the season four of our number had won letters, and twenty-one had numerals in
some sport.

The term of 1920-'21 found us greatly diminished in numbers, but still large
compared with the other classes; one hundred and eight of us returned to assume
Sophomore dignity. With Beth McClure, Quenelle Harrold, and Margaret McLean
as our officers, we are completing our second year of college achievement.

In every branch of athletics our "pelanky, lanky" is followed by a strong Sopho-
more team.

Our reputation for hospitality is still intact; often we have cheered the hearts
of our fellow-students with the announcement that "the Sophomores have an or-
chestra out from town tonight, come over to the gym and dance."

As we look back on our first two years as college students, there are few, if any,
regrets, and we earnestly hope deep in each Sophomore's heart that they will continue
"To be proud of us at A. S. C, A. S. C, '
Twenty-three!"

Polly Stone, Historian.

iFr?sI|man fl^rfra

Victoria Howie President .

Frances Young Vice-President .

Ella Louise Landress . . Secretary-Treasurer

Victoria Howie

Winona Peck

Cornelia Archer

Adams, Louise
Akers, Isabel
Alexander. Joyce
Allen, Imogene
Alford, Attie
Allen, Nannie
Ames, Frances
Archer, Cornelia
Arnold, Emily
Arnold, Mary Evelyn
Askew, Elizabeth
Beason, Josephine
Bernhardt, Dell
Beeser, Alberta
Bishop, Ruth J.
Bivtngs, Rebecca

MEMBERS

Boone, Grace
BowDoiN, Mary R.
Boyd, Maude
Brandon, Sara
Broach, Ruth
Brown, Ida E.
Brown, Janice
Brown, Louise C.
Bryan, Sarah
Burkhead, Annabel
Burt, Virginia
Byrd, Evelyn
Calloway, Carolyn
Cannon, Augusta
Cannon, Gwynn
Carr, Alice

Chandler, Estelle
Colley, Mary W.
Comfort, Helen
Covington, Carolyn
Craig, Catherine
Craig, Ruth
Cunningham, Margaret
Dabney, Elizabeth
Davidson, Beulah
Denney, Kathleen
Denney, Mary
De Zouche, Ruth
DoBBs, Marguerite
Dolvin, Mary K.
Dowdy, Anna Belle
Duke, Nell

Eakes, Nancy
Elyea, Dorothy
Epes, Elizabeth
Evans, Eunice
Evans, Nancy
Ficklen, Emmie
Flowers, Sara
Gardner, Frances
Gilliland, Mary Frances
Gordon, Selma
Grune, Mary
Griffin, Margaret
GuERRY, Augusta
Harrell, Kate
Harrington, Alice
Harris, Kathryn
Harrison, Miriam
Harvard, Ruth
Havis, Josephine
Hedgepeth, Ruth
Hendrix, Louise
Henry, Elizabeth
Henry-, Margaret
Hewlett, Mary Stewart
Houston, Elizabeth
Howard, Lucis
Howie, Victoria
Hunter, Sara Louise
Jackson, Agnes
Jackson, Corinne
Jennings, Mattie
Johnson, Lollie
Johnson, Marian
King, Mary Evelyn
Ladd, Margaret
Lane, Bettie Sue
Leak, Concord
Lindsay, Marguerite

Little, Vivian
Long, Rosalie
Luten, Dorothy
McAlpine, Lillian
McCarrick, Elizabeth .
McClain, Lois
McDow, Margaret
McDowell, Sara
McLeod, Mary S.
McMurray, Charlotte
McMurry, Edna
Mann, Mary L.
Martin, Marguerite
Maxwell, Annie Byrd
Meade, Anna
Melton, Edith
Melton, Evelyn
Merrin, Virginia
Middlebrooks, Lillian
Miller, Minnie W.
Mills, Ela
Mobberly, Mary
Moon, Eliza
Morton, Cora
MosiER, Mary
Murchison, Lewis
Murphy, Pauline
Meyers, Frances
Nickles, Mary
Oliver, Lucy
Pappenheimer, Louise
Parker, Eleanor
Passmore, Clyde
Peck, Winona
Perry, Elizabeth
Phillips, Martha
Porter, Priscilla
Powell, Ella Jo/:

Powell, Margaret
Rhyne, Lucy
Rice, Birdie
Richardson, Cora
Robinson, Emma Sue
Saunders, Sophie
Saxon, Emma
Scandrett, Carrie
Scott, Dorothy
Sentell. Claudia
Sewell, Mary
singleterry, frances
Smith, Charlotte
Smith, Daisy F.
Smith, Melissa
Smith, Susan
Spence, Ruth
Spruell, Gladys
Stewart, Mary
Stinson, Annie Peyton
Strauss, Marianne

SWANEY, ElMA

SwANN, Fannie
Thomas, Augusta
Turner, Frances
Turner, Martha
Turner, Sara E.
Waldrop, Clara
Waller, Frances
Wheeler, Pauline
Whitaker, Rosemary
Whyte, Eleanor
Wilkinson, Catherine
Wilson, Elsie
Woolley, Frances
Wright, Helen V.
Wright, Mary Ann
Young, Frances

IfiBtorg of 3FrraI|man (EIubb

i N September 14, 1920, the good ship Freshman, manned by a crew of
163, set forth for the first time to sail the sea of college experience,
Captain Victoria Howie being in command. Scarcely had it lost sight
of the shores of home before it encountered three other vessels, bound
for the same port. The haughty ship Senior made no recognition of
the good ship Freshman. The second ship. Junior, manned by a crew of valiant
sailors, maintained friendly relations through the entire voyage and helped to steer
Freshman through many troubled waters. The third vessel proved to be a man-of-
war called Sophomore, and carrying a crew of ferocious desperadoes. Almost im-
mediately they opened fire and for seven days and seven nights the battle raged.
A veritable band of pirates, the Sophomore crew lost no chance of humiliating the
untried sailors of Freshman ship. On a memorable night, since known as Stunt night,
the contest reached its height, and by sheer originality and with the courageous
Freshman crew overpowered the too-confident Sophomores and bore back in triumph
a black cat which was henceforth to bring them luck.

When hostilities had ceased, the generous Freshman crew entertained at a Thanks-
giving party their former enemies and the crews of the "Junior" and "Senior,"
which were sailing near. On this occasion peaceful relations were established with
the crews of the three ships and maintained until the end of the voyage.

The four vessels found easy sailing for a time, then all four entered the troubled
waters of Examination Straits. Here they barely escaped capsizing and some of
the vessels had the misfortune to have some of their sailors overboard.

But all troubles must have an end and before many days had passed, the good
ship Freshman sailed into clearer waters and turned it prow toward the port for
which it had set sail.

Margaret Powell, Historian.

N order that a Freshman may advance from the stage of verdant fresh-
ness into that happy estate when she recognizes the fact that she is a
student of Agnes Scott and a "member of the Freshman Class," instead
of "just a Freshman," there are necessary exactly four may I say the
word? thrills.
First comes the unforgetable thrill of the moment when the newly-arrived one
gazes for the first time with awed, curious, admiring eyes at the campus and build-
ings. Her thoughts at such a time are not in an expressible form, but her expressions
run something like this: "Jean! Are we leally here? Isn't it gorgeous to see it at
last? Oh, it is, it is, it is just what I wanted it to be! Oh, Fm so thrilled!" Thus
occurs the primary thrill.

The time of the next one is purely arbitrary, but the thrill certainly
must and does come, and it more than anything else brings about the new
growth. This advance is in order where a Freshman first catches a little glimpse
of what the college and more than that being part of it means to the old girls.
But by far the most appropriate, and surely the most thrilling, time for this
thrill is when a girl first hears the "Alma Mater" sung. This year that experience
came under most auspicious circumstances the night of the hike, for the moon, beau-
tiful enough itself to send delicious shivers up anyone's backbone, was shining
down on the crowd of girls gathered around the camp-fire; the fire was dying out;
the night was very still and beautiful and when the song began that told just how
much Agnes Scott was loved by everybody, the little wriggle of pure joy among
Freshmen could almost be felt so great was their delight at their new discovery.
The third thrill in this necessary awakening to the meaning of college has one
essential requisite: the girl must cry while experiencing it, and for no better reason
than that she was just "thrilled to death" and could not help it. And, of course,
only the morning when Charlotte and Peg, Aimee D. and Ellen are taken into Hoasc
could be lovely and stirring enough to cause this part of the transformation.
Everyone is so proud and happy that there are no words glad enough to express it
and so since the feeling has to come out somehow, tears perforce come to the rescue,
and now the change in our Freshman is nearly completed.

This last thrill is the one that does the work after all, for through it she really
catches a clear view of the "gleam" of the goal she has hitherto been striving for
almost in the dark, and this view gives the inspiration that will attain the goal.
What occasion is there impressive and beautiful enough to cause this feeling but in-
vestitures? The processional hymn "Ancient of Days" combined with an Academic
procession, the much-loved Seniors' and the Sophomores' white middy-suits, the effect
on a Freshman can only be guessed at by her palpitating heart and icy hands. As
she gazes raptly at the gold tassel bobbing on Miss Smith's cap then and there she
decides that a Ph.D. alone will satisfy her, and that she will have one, too, or know
the reason why. And this, then, is when her development by a process of thrills is
finished and she is and knows that she is an "Agnes Scott girl."

Jrr^5lar dlass

OFFICERS

First Semester
Ruth Brown
Elizabeth Stroud
Margaret Yeager.

Bakdwell, Mary
Beaeden, Ida
Bradshaw, Maey
Callahan, I^la Mae
Cartland, Coknelia
Cbocker, Helen

FAJIBEOUGH. CiERTRUDE

Hertzler, Anne
Hill, Margaret V.
Hill, Martha V.

Brown, Ruth
EssLiNGER, Nell
Farmer, Annie Earle
Moody, Caroline
Morton, Susie Reid
McColgan, Margaret
McCuEDY, Mary

Christie, Helen
Downing, Frances
Hobgold, Mary

Adams, Agnes
Bordeaux, Hazel
Gilchrist, Katie

President

Vice-President

. Secretary-Treasurer .

MEMBERS

FIRST YEAR IRREGULARS
Hyatt. Barron

Second Semester
. Nell Esslinger
Mildred McFall
Barron Hyatt

JjY>

Nl-N

McDonald, Katheeine
McFall. Mildred
Matthews, Saea
Moore, Ouida
Morton, Sidney

SECOND TEAR IRREGULARS
Nash, Catherine
Neal, Catherine M.
RiiHiNsoN. Rosalie
Ruff, Edith
Ryan. Mildred
Saunders, Rebecca

SPECIALS
King, Rhea
McCaskill. Cojia

UNCLASSinED STUDENTS
Gilchrist, Thilippa
Grimes, Annie Brooks

Parks. Elizabeth
Peck, Emily
Preas, Nannabeth
Robinson, Helen M,
Rodgers. Madee
Smith, Evelyn
Stephenson, Hester

ViEMEDYE, REBA

Walker, Dorothy
W.iELicK, Eugenia

Steoud, Elizabeth
Stuart, Frances
Tripp, Nancy
W.ARDEX, Marjory
W.ATTS, .Jessie
Teagee, Maegaeet

Millikin, Grace
Phaer, Montene
Ryan, Blanche

(92

JIITH the coining of every September a new class enters Agnes Scott, but
/ there are many bright and pretty faces among those new girls which
J are not looking forward to four years of hard work. They are merely
here for a year or two of college life, and belong to a class which is as
old as Agnes Scott itself a class which is added to and taken from
each year by new ones coming and old ones going.

We are proud of being able to boast of the art, music and vocal students who lend
gaiety and entertainment to the life of the college.

Our road has always been a hard, rough one. The committee tries each year to
lessen the number of Irregulars whom they consider frivolous and without ambition;
but perhaps their ambition aspires to something higher than an A.B. degree. Who
can tell?

Under the leadership of our competent president, Vivian Gregory, the class, dur-
ing the year of 1919-'20, gave the college a general wake-up as to its worth. The
B. E. F. call came from the college, and although they did not expect it the class
answered with one hundred and twenty-five.

This short history of a year or two of the Irregular class would be incomplete
without the praises due one of the most active members the class has ever had. It
was Harriet Noyes who planned and carried out the presentation of the first cab-
aret ever given at Agnes Scott. It was she who created and successfully placed the
musical comedy, "My Romeo" before the students and friends of the college. Of
course, she had the entire co-operation of the class, which enabled her to make these
two events ones to be remembered for years to come.

Musical comedy and such did not take up all the time of the class of 1919-'20,
however. Athletics also had its attraction for many of these girls and irregular bas-
ket ball practice usually had a very regular attendance. We were only allowed four
games during the season, but these were played with such pep and good sports-
manship that our opponents found it a rather difficult task to make the final score in
their favor. Although we could boast of but one victory, the fun we had at prac-
tices and the favorable criticism given us by other classes made our athletic career
seem a successful one.

Spring of '20 found us anxious to part for our various homes, but in order to
make the parting one never to be forgotten the class entertained at a tea given at
East Lake.

After the holidays we came back to find many faces missing and new ones in their
places; but spurred on by our new president, Ruth Brown, we are anticipating more
glory for the records of the Irregular class.

Coma McCaskill, Class Historian.

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^tu&^nt O^ou^rnm^nt Aasnrtattiin

iHERE is in our college an association of which every student is a part.
Through it she is given the opportunity to create the spirit that shall
foster her ideal and shall put an end to all things that are not fine
and true.

Here we are invited to learn to play the game fairly and squarely, to
work and to play together. As an expression of this purpose and as a pledge of loy-
alty to our association, each student signs the following statement:

"We, the students of Agnes Scott College, desiring to assume individual and
community responsibility for the life and conduct of our college, having formed our-
selves into an association based on the honor system, we do hereby promise to up-
hold its laws not only in academic work, but in every phase of our college life."

We follow this ideal which has been passed to us from those who have gone on
before that we may learn to live together honorably and unselfishly; that we may
create conditions that make us students who will be worth while, intellectually, phys-
ically, socially and spiritually, in fine, girls who will be good citizens here in
college and in life after we have left it. We receive this ideal as an heritage. As
we cherished it and see it grow, we blend our voice in the echoes of those others
which have sung

"And the message that's graven deep into our hearts
Thou shalt grave on ten thousand and more."

Margaret McLaughlin President of Student Government

Jean McAlister First Vice-President of Student Government

Charlotte Newton .... Second Vice-President of Student Government

Marguerite Watkins .... Third Vice-President of Student Government

Mary Knight Secretary of Student Government

Ruth Scandrett Treasurer of Student Government

Lilburne Ivey ( , r>

,, > Junior Representatives

Nell Buchanan ( '^

Margaret Hay ) c- i r,

._ T,. V Sophomore representatives

Hilda McConnell j

Cora Connent 1 ^ n

_ . V Senior Representatives

Dorothy Allen j

Coma McCaskill Irregular Representative

Cora Coknent Marguerite Watkins

Dorothy Allen- Margaret McLaughlin Charlotte Newton

Mary Knicht Ruth Scandrett

Nell Buchanan Jean McAlister Lilburne Ivey

Margaret Hay Hilda McConnell

Coma McCaskill

^""V

i'tub^nt O^0u?rttmfnt (^.anUnnn at iElmtra

g|N December the eleventh to the thirteenth, the annual conference of the
Woman's Intercollegiate Association met at Elmira College, Elmira, New
York. Agnes Scott, as one of the three Southern colleges belonging to
this Association, sent two representatives, Margaret McLaughlin, the
president of Student Government, and Nell Buchanan, a representative
from the Junior class.

The Student Government conference has always been a source of inspiration and
help to the colleges, and Agnes Scott contributes ideas as well as obtains them. It
is gratifying to compare our association with those of the forty-seven other colleges
represented, and to realize that we have our plan, not because we know no better,
but because it really is creditable, and best adapted to our needs. Our delegates
obtained many helpful suggestions from the topics discussed, such as the relation
of faculty to students; of students to self-government; the mechanism of self-gov-
ernment, and the honor system. Then subjects pertaining to college life in gen-
eral were discussed, among them the cut system, publications, chaperonage rules,
privileges, light rules, chapel attendance, and social life. But one of the best things
that the conference afforded was the inspirational address by Mrs. Rosenbury, the
president of the National Association of Collegiate Alumnae.

The proposition was brought up by a Southern college that, due to the expense
entailed by sending representatives, the Southern colleges should belong to the South-
ern Association only, sending one silent delegate, if they desired, to the Northern
Conference. This would make two separate Intercollegiate Associations east of the
Mississippi, one above and one below the Mason-Dixon line. The Southern colleges
were made to feel that they really contributed to the Association when this proposi-
tion was unanimously defeated.

The students and faculty of Elmira College proved themselves to be excellent
hostesses, and every hospitality was extended to the visitors. Among the entertain-
ments were a welcoming tea, a play by the Senior class, and a trip to Watkins Glen
in automobiles. The students also provided amusement for the delegates with their
excellent singing, in the dining room and in the auditorium, and a splendid student
orchestra played during meals.

The conference this year was a great success, and a source of inspiration and
pleasure to the delegates and to the colleges which they represented.

Afifinnatton

Lena Kernodle President

Margaret McLaughlin Vice-President

Frances Evans Secretary

Martha Latham Treasurer

Emily Harrison Southern Representative

hmt Cinu^rttm^nt Asannatton at Agtt^a Btntt

?<iNE of the milestones in the history of our student life was the conference
^^ of the Southern Intercollegiate Student Government Association, which
met at Agnes Scott in April. Representative girls from all the South-
ern colleges of standing met to discuss the problems of college life.
Among the colleges sending delegates were Randolph-Macon, Sophie
Newcomb, Hollins, Greensboro College, North Columbia College for Women, Bre-
nau, Mississippi State Normal and Industrial College, Wesleyan, Shorter, Converse,
Alabama, Florida State and West Hampton.

The officers of this conference, elected at the Greensboro conference last year were
Lena Kernodle, of North Carolina College for Women, president; Margaret
McLaughlin, of Agnes Scott, vice-president; Frances Evans, of Sophie Newcomb, sec-
retary; Martha Latham, of Randolph-Macon, treasurer, and representative from the
Southern to Northern Conference.

In addition to the business meetings held each morning and afternoon, the col-
lege organizations contributed to the social enjoyment of the conference with various
entertainments. Blackfriars presented several delightful plays, followed by a formal
reception. Several teas were given in the course of the conference by the Y. W. C.
A. and Hoasc. The Athletic Association sponsored a trip to Stone Mountain to
view the procedure of the Lost Cause.

This conference, in addition to being an inspiration to all, brought us in actual
contact with representatives of the highest types of all our Southern colleges. Agnes
Scott counts it a privilege to have had this Association as her guest.

HERE'S a gay little sign outside a certain broad paneled door in Re-
kah Lobby. Not everybody knows that it is there, but the folks with
seeing eyes know that above that door there swings a brave invisible
little svmbol, the sign of the Blue Triangle. What does it mean? It
means that beyond the door there lies a room that smiles all over and
says "Come in!" a room of peaceful, "homey" comfort and cheer with things to
read, and quiet in which to think, and a merry-crackling fire for cold, rainy days.

But the Y. W. C. A. (for now you've guessed what the symbol is I does not simply
furnish a bit of home for you in the midst of crowded college days. It goes away
back and takes hold of you before you ever leave home. The Social Service De-
partment is not only responsible for the bit of home and the letters and a friendly
face at the station when you arrive, but it carries you through your first college days
on "wing parties" and teas and receptions.

The Social Department has not entirely monopolized you for Miss Publicity
has been doing her best for you from the moment of your arrival. With sundry
bits of spicy advice she nods at you cheerfully from the Bulletin Board and all
through the year she helps in making you stand wide-eyed before her while she raps
you or praises you or gives you a friendly warning of things on and off the campus.

The Religious Meeting Department can't stay in the background long; for she it is
who plans the Sunday vesper services, chapel services and "evening watch."

Then the Membership Department does the biggest thing of all for you, because
she asks you to do something. She asks you to enter the wide door of service and
happy living that the Young Women's Christian Association holds open to enter it
by uniting with others in a purpose to live as a true follower of Jesus Christ. And
when you have begun anew for the first time to follow Him, the Social Service De-
partment seeks to lead you to places in Decatur and Atlanta where folks are needed
to minister in Christ's name. She gives you a chance to serve.

World Fellowship Department has a most important work to do. She enlists you
in voluntary study classes and through study groups and pageants opens to you a
wide door to knowledge and understanding of world needs and world opportuni-
ties for life service.

Finance Department reminds you of Atlas, for it gets underneath all the whole
big work that the Y. W. C. A. is trying to do. Finance Department sees to it that
your pledges to systematic giving are sent to Nacoochee, to the Agnes Scott mission-
ary whom we support, or the foreign fields, to World Y. W. C. A. work, and to
carrying on our own work here on the campus.

(92

All these are but ways in which the Y. W. C. A. seeks to put into practice the
teachings of Jesus Christ, founding every activity upon a belief in His own declara-
tion that He "came that we might have life and have it more abundantly." The
Young Women's Christian Association seeks to provide for the well-being and
growth of body, mind, and spirit; to lead students to accept Jesus Christ as Saviour
and Lord, to put into practice with gladness and conviction His secret of living,
and through Him to unite themselves with Christians everywhere in making the
will of Christ effective in human society and in bringing in the Kingdom of God
throughout the world.

Charlotte Bell
UndcrgrafUiate Field
Refiresentative ;
Viidergradiiate
National Board Repre-
sentative of Soittli
Atlantic Field

Faxny McCaa
Clir. Social Dept.

|. m, 01. A. (Unbxmi

Alice Joxes
. Religious Work
Department

Ei.LEX Wilson
. ^yorld Fellousliip
Uept.

Margaret Bell
Vice-President
r. Memhersfiip Dept.

Mary McLellax

>>eeretaru
hr. Pnhlicity Dept.

RrTH Hall
Treasurer
: Finance Dept.

AiMEE D. Glover

clir. Social Service

Dept.

Blue Ridge, N. C, June, 1920.
Dearest Sarah:

Blue Ridge at last! I never thought either of us would ever get here, did you?
Do you remember last Spring how thrilled we were that night when Margaret got
her Blue Ridge memory book and began to tell us about everything, and we sat up
and drank it all in and decided then and there we just had to go and we wrote our
families that very night? Well, to think I'm really here and you aren't . . . but
there! I won't begin on that strain because, of course, you didn't know your sister
was going to be married in June and you'd be maid of honor, and, besides, I've got
so much to tell you that I'll rever get through in time for supper unless I get down
to business.

If you can imagine beautiful, white, colonial buildings half way up a mountain
side, to which you come from the valley by a roadway coming through rhododen-
dren woods; in front of the buildings a great, clear, wind-blown space across which
you look out far away to the great range of the Craggie mour tains; and behind the
largest building, clustered on the sloping part of the mountains, the dozen or more
little white cottages that belong to the different cottages, and then if you can imag-
ine girls everywhere on the broad porch of Robert E. Hall, on cottage steps, in
every spot and by-path, some on their way to the swimming pool, some going to the
tennis courts, some starting off on a hike, and still others sitting around in quiet
nooks and corners of this great, wonderful place, if you can stretch your imagina-
tion to take in all that, you'll at least have a faint idea of what Blue Ridge and this
Y. W. C. A. Student Conference looks like this afternoon.

Of course, I can't see it all at once, but I know it's all there. You see, I'm draw-
ing a "composite picture" as we used to be told to do in Biology Lab.

Six of the glorious ten days we're to be here have already fled by, and they have
been full to overflowing with classes, meetings, hikes, "stunts," fun and new people

and adventures, and I who am of the earth earthy must
add eating and sleeping, of which we have done much.

There are six hundred girls here from nearly all the
colleges in the South, and a great many wonderful leaders,
who conduct the classes and give talks to the whole confer-
ence or to smaller groups. It was perfectly splendid to
meet so many girls from other colleges and be able to
"swap" experiences. We've gotten some brand new ideas
; nl can hardly wait to get back to school and try them out,
.1 m1 we ve passed along some of Agnes Scott's ideas. Blue
liidge is a regular clearing house not only for Y. W. C. A.
plans, but for Student Government, Athletic Associations
and everything. You can imagine that when somebody
starts off: "Oh. at Kandolph-Macon we " everybody wants to talk at once and tell
how her college does things. And you end up bv fairly bristling with new ideas,
when you rush back to the cottage and wash your hands before dinner.

By supper time we are all ravenous and we rush to our Agnes Scott table in the
larger dining room ready to consume innumerable biscuits and serenade all the
neighboring colleges. Meals are such fun and such necessities here. It's an
honor to eat all that is possible for the one who eats the most is temporary chair-
man of the Consumers' League. I refrain from revealing the name of the pres-
ent president.

After supper we stroll around until time for the evening lecture, or sit on Lee
Hall steps watching the mountains and the sunset. I never knew before that moun-
tains can be so beautiful always changing with the shadows of the near or distant
clouds upon them, sometimes breaking through white clouds in startling blue near-
ness, again dreary and hazy and far away; and at evening time flooded with sun-
set glory that makes them almost too dazzling to look upon until the light fades
and the mountains are left, purple and sharply outlined against the sky.

Afterward, a night of stars and a quiet home-going, to gather around the log fire
for our own vesper service the best loved part of the whole day. Here in the fire-
light as we talk over all that the day has brought us we learn to know each other
as we never did at college and to experience in a deeper sense the reality of God.
And so the day ends with a prayer in our hearts and the beginning of a great under-
standing that is reaching out a bit farther every day.

I am thinking of a snatch of poem I read today that seems so perfectly to fit this
Blue Ridge experience:

"/ am in love with far high-seeing places

That look on plains half sunlight and half storm;
In love luith homes where from the circling faces

Veils pass, and laughing fellowship glows warm."

Blue Ridge has many "high seeing places," Sarah; places where one catches a
great wind-blown vision of what God's love can do in human lives, of what this
world of ours would be like if the Kingdom of Rightness came into every part of it,
what it would be like "if we did but live the Christian creed."

Always and always these everlasting mountains are giving us quietness of spirit
and are sending us to search our own hearts and lives and to lay hold on the
things that cannot be shaken.

The people and the fun and the mountains and the still, quiet times are all
blended together so that I caii't tell which has meant most. I don't went to sep-
arate them. I only know this, Sarah: that being here has made us know more of
the joy and worth-whileness of living and loving and serving and that you must
come next year. Yours happily,

ir-i

irWio^

Anna Marie Landress Josephine Logan

Mary Goodrich Edith Kerns Lillian McAlpine

President

Eloise Knight Ruth Hall

Frances Gardner

Ruth Pirkle

^tubpttt Holuntwr Untnn

GNES Scott has eight members of the Student Volunteer Movement for
Foreign Missions of the United States and Canada. This movement
was organized in 1886 at Northfield, Mass. It took as its slogan,
"The evangelization of the world in this generation"; and as the
declaration for members: "It is my purpose, if God permit, to be a
foreign missionary."

The Agnes Scott volunteers have their local band of eight members, of which Edith
Kerns is leader, and Anna Marie Landress secretary. They are also members of the
Atlanta Union, composed of about fifty volunteers in "Tech," Oglethorpe University,
Emory University and Agnes Scott.

The message of the State work can be summed up in its slogan for the year:
"The WORLD needs JESUS; CHRIST needs YOU."

QO)

(f[mxB mh (^amxnxttn (Hitninnm of tl|p Alumna?
ABBortatton

President Mary Wallace Kirk, '11, 209 South Cave Street, Tuscumbia, Ala.
First Vice-President Carroll (Stearns I Wey, '12, 287 Myrtle Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Second Vice-President Agnes Scott Donaldson, '17, 1123 N. Cascade Avenue,

Colorado Springs, Col.
Secretary Lucile Alexander, '11, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.
Treasurer Florence N. Smith, '13, "Clearview," Peachtree Road, Atlanta, Ga.

COMMITTEES

Finance Florence N. Smith, '13, "Clearview," Peachtree Road, Atlanta, Ga.

Publicity Myra Scott, '18, Russell Apartments, Atlanta, Ga.

Scholarship Emma Pope ( Moss I Dieckmann, '13, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

Preparatory Schools Emma Jones, '18, Decatur, Ga.

Curriculum Jeannette (Victor) Levy, '16, 2223 King's Way, Augusta, Ga.

Class Organization and Records Lottie Mae (Blair) Lawton, '13, 8 New Strest,

Charleston, S. C.
Local Clerks Essie Roberts, '14, fairburn, Ga.
Tea Room Fannie G. (May son) Donaldson, '12, Imperial Hotel, Atlanta, Ga.

Alumna? AsHonatton

JURING the past year, the main work of the Alumnae Association has
been that of reorganization. There is now a general association which
in its organization ranks well with that of any Alumnae Association of
ij a similar grade college. Three Branch Associations have been estab-
lished, one in Atlanta, one in Decatur, and one in Montgomery, and
especial stress is being laid this year on the organization of additional branches,
hoping to increase the number to ten. In the few months since their beginning,
these branches have provided for the support of a Serbian student for a year at
the college. A complete and accurate file of all the Alumnae was made last year,
which totals something over twelve hundred names.

Great strides forward have been made, not only in a better organization, but
also in a financial way. At the last annual meeting, a budget for running ex-
penses of one thousand dollars was adopted. An Alumnae office is to be estab-
lished at the college, and before long, there may be a General Secretary "on the
job." Eighty-five thousand, nine hundred and eighteen dollars have been paid on
the hundred thousand dollars pledged to the Endowment campaign, and not satis-
fied with this big accomplishment the Association has undertaken to endow the Chair
of Mathtmaeics, in memory of Miss Anna Young, by a movement to raise fifty thou-
sand dollars. It hopes to do this during the present year.

In addition to the reorganization of the General Association, the College Coun-
cil was formed for the purpose of serving as a clearing house "for the interchange
of ideas on the part of the Administration, the Alumnae, and the Student Body,
concerning the policies of the College," and to "co-ordinate and direct all the
Alumnae activities which concern the College interests." The members of this
Council are the officers and chairmen of the General Association, representatives
from each branch, four councillors at large, the Alumnae trustees, and two repre-
sentatives from the present College Council. This is a splendid forward step and
should mean a great deal to the future of the College.

Among the special plans for the year, two are most important: Agnes Scott
is to be presented at the "College Day" activities of a number of representative
High Schools, and class organization of the Alumnae is being stressed. All the
committees are new, and it takes time to get things to running smoothly, but every-
one knows that the Agres Scott Alumnae Association is going to do great things
for the College in the future, as it has always done, not only in actual accom-
plishments, but especially in the inspiration of "those who have gone on before."

Frances Charlotte Markley Editor-in-Chief

Ethel Ware Assistant Editor4n-Chief

Mary Anne Justice Photographic Editor

Dell Bernhardt Art Editor

Minnie Allen Assistant Art Editor

Elizabeth Wilson Associate Editor

Ruth Virden Associate Editor

Alice Virden Local Editor

Althea Stephens Athletic Editor

Theressa Newton Business Manager

Elizabeth Brown Assistant Business Manager

Mary Katherine McKinney \

Lucia Murchison [ Advertising Marmgers

Ruth Evans )

5(LHc;c

Q2,

l|f Aurora i^tafit

Elizabeth Enloe
Associate Editor

LuciLE Little Laura Oliver

Exchange Editor Asst. Editor-in-Chief

Rachel Rushton Cama Burgess

Editor-in-Chief Business Mgr.

Concord Leake Elizabeth Wilson

Circulation Mgr. Associate Editor

Christine Evans Louise Crossland

Asst. Business Mgr. Asst. Circulation Mgr.

Ulll? .^goiuBttr BUf[

Dorothy Bowron
Society Editor

Polly Stone
Asst. Editor-in-Chief

Elsanor Hyde
Athletic Editor

Alice Virden
Exchang? Editor

Sarah Till
Business Mgr.

Helen Faw
Y. W. C. A. Editor

Nell Buchanan
Editor-in-Chief

Christine Evans
Joke Editor

Frances Harper
Asst. Business Mgr.

Elizabeth Ransom
Asst. Circulation Mgi

Sarah Bryan
Circulation Mgr.

A?,NIE Gambrill
Alumnae Editor

Augusta Brewer
Recorder of Points

Margaret Wade
Auditor

Louise Fluker
Student Treasurer

i^batmg (Eounrtl

Anna Marie Landress Cama Burgess Margaret Bell

Secretary President

Jeanette Archer Aimee D. Glover Eleanor Carpenter

Treasurer

FACULTY MEMBERS
Miss McKinney Miss Hearon Dr. Armistead Mr. Stukes

The past year has witnessed the keenest interest, perhaps, that the Debating Council has
Ivnown in the hstory of its organization. This is due to the fact that for the first time since the
founding of Agnes Scott, a triangular debate was held with the two other leading woman's colleges
of the South, namely, Randolph-Macon, at Lynchburg, Va., and Sophie Newcomh, at New
Orleans. La.

Prior to this year It has been our custom to hold an annual debate with Sophie Newcomb,
but never before has a third inter-collegiate debate been arranged. Such a plan necessitated the
selecting of two debating teams from the two societies, one of which we sent to Randolph-Macon
and the other we kept on the home field to debate with the Sophie Newcomh team which came
here. Sophie Newcomb, in turn, kept a second team at home to meet the rival team which
Randolph-Macon sent to challenge them. In this manner each college had a debate with the
othei- two, by sending one team out and keeping the other team at home.

Such a plan as this called for more teams, more preliminaries, more dei)aters, and hence a
livelier interest in debating. A greater number of girls had the opportunity to show their ability
in this line, and double the usual number had the privilege of participating in an inter-collegiate
debate. In all these respects and in many more besides, the triangular inter-collegiate debate
has proved successful. If increased interest and activity are Indications of future success, we hope
and believe that further development of this plan is assured.

(iffirprB at MntmuBV^mun Uttprarg ^ttmt^

First Semester Second Semester

Cama Burgess President .... Anna Marie Landress

Sarah Till Vice-President . . . Charlotte Newton

PiUTH Virden Secretary-Treasurer .... Julia Watkins

AiMEE p. Glover ) /i/e,^g^^ Debating Council . . Hilda McConnell

Anna Marie Landress

iUn^mnaiftt^an Hit? rarij i>nmtij

Arnold, Mary Evelyn
Ballard, Martha
BowRON, Dorothy
Brewer, Augusta
Brodnax, Sarah B.
Brown, Ada E.
Buchanan, Nell
Burgess, Cama
Bltrum, Vircinl\
Burt, Virginia
Burkhead, Annabel
Boone, Grace
Brondon, Sara
BiESER, Alberta
Carnes, Maybeth
Carr, Isabel
Cook, Thelma
Carr, Alice
Craig, Catherine
Davis, Romola
Daye, Nelle F.
Davidson, Beulah
Dennington, Catherine
Evans, Christine
Evans, Ruth
Faw, Helen
Gardner, Josephine
Glover, Aimee D.
Gordon, Eleanor
Greene, Mary Louise
Griffin, Margaret
Gardner, Lelia Frances
Hamner, Pearl L.
Harper, Frances
Harrison, Sarah
Harrold, Quenelle
Hart, Anne
Hewlett, Mary S.
Hoke, Elizabeth
HoLLis, Viola
Howard, Lucia

Hull, Marion
Huttter, Emily
Hyde, Eleanor
Henry, Margaret
Harris, Catherine
Hill, Martha Virginia
Hedgepeth, Ruth
Jameson, Julia
Kelly, Jaunita
King, Rhea
Knight, Mary
King, Evelyn
Landress, Anna Marie
Love, Roberta
Lockhart, Elizabeth
Little, Lucile
Landress, Ella Louise
Long, Rosalie
Lane, Betty Sue
Lewis, Anna
Malloy, Elizabeth
Murphy, Myrtle
Murphy, Vienna
Murphy, Pauline
Milukin, Grace
Milburn Marguerite
Mann, Mary
Miller, Annie Will
Moore, Ouida
McCaa, Fannie
McCaskell, Coma
McIntosh, Martha
McKinney, Mary C.
Newton, Charlotte
Newton, Theresa
Nichols, Elizabeth
Ogletree, Fredwa
Oliver, Frances
Ordway, Virginia
Parkam, Elizabeth
Parks, Elizabeth

Parker, Eleanor
Passmore, Clyde
Philips, Martha
Rauson, Margaret
Russell, Eula
Saunders, Julia
Scandrett, Ruth
Scott, Dorothy
Scott, Harriett
Smith, Lucile
Spence, Clotile
Stansell, Sara
Strickland, Anna Mae
Shields, Catherine
Stubbs, Laura B.
Singletary, Frances
Scandrett, Carrie
Stephens, Louie Dean
Spence, Ruth
Till, Sarah

TiMMERMAN, LuCY

Travis, Allie Louise
Turner, Margaret
TwiTTY, Amy
Virden, Alice
Virden, Ruth
Watkins, Julia
Watkins, Marguerite
Wayt, Helen
Wassum, Eva
Whipple, Alice
Whitfield. Frances
WiLKiNS, Rosa
Williams, Fustelle
WooTEN, Lucy

WOMELSDORF, MaRGARETTA

Wheeler, Pauline
Wilkinson, Catherine
Ware, Ethel
Wilson, Elizabeth
Walker, Dorothy

Propgban ICtt^rarg i>oridi|

OFFICERS

First Semester
Margaret Bell . . . . . . President .

Eunice Dean Vice-President

Margaret Wade Secretary .

Helen Barton Treasurer .

Second Semester

. Eunice Dean

LiLBURNE Ivy

Althea Stephens

Nannie Campbell

Members Debating Council
Eleanor Carpenter Jeanette Archer

AcEE, Caroline
Allan, Clara Mae
Allan, Imogene
Allen, Dorothy
Allen, Minnie
Almond, Ruth
Alford, Attie

Amis, Frances
Arant, Frances
Archer, Cornelia
Archer, Jeanette
Barton, Helen
Barton, Mary
Beason, Josephine

Bell, Margaret
Bell,. Charlotte
Benings, Rehecca
Blackmon, Myrtle
Bordeaux, Hazel
BowDoiN, Mary Bess
Broach, Ruth

\

Brown, Elizabeth
Brown, Janice
Brown, Ruth
Bryan, Sarah
Byrd, Evelyn
Callwell, Mary
Callahan, Lola Mae
Callaway, Carolyn
Callaway, Gena
Campbell, Nannie
Cannon, Augusta
Cannon, Gwy'none
Carpenter, Eleanor
Cartland, Cornelia
Cawthon, Marion
Clarke, Edythe
Clarke, Minnie Lee
Calley, Mary' Wood
Comfort, Helen Lane
CoMPTON, Lois
Cousins, Marguerite
Covington, Caroline
Craig, Ruth
Croker, Helen
Dabney, Elisabeth
Dairs, Edythe
Dean, Eunice
Denny', Kathleen
Denny, Mary Martha
DeZouche, Ruth
DoBBS, Margaret
Dalvin, Mary Key
Duke, Nell
Eakes, Martha
Epes, Elizabeth
Esslincer, Nell
Evans, Eunice
Evans, Nancy
Farquhar. Caroline
Ficklen, Eunice Bounds

FiNNEY', ^LiRY ROBB

French, Ellen
Fulton, Sarah
Gambill, Anne
Gilchrist, Katie
Gilchrist, Phillipa
Gilliland, Frances
Girardeau, Ivylyn

GOODROE, GeRALDINE

Gordon, Selma
Green, Mary H.
Grimes, Brooks
GuERRY, Augusta
Grille, Emily
Hall, Helen
Hall, Ruth
Hanes, Mariwil
Harrell, Kate
Harris, Mary
Harrison, Miriam

Harrington, Alice
Harvard, Ruth
Hains, Josephine
Hay, NLargaret
HuBRicK, Margaret
Henry, Elizabeth
Herman, Emma
Hobgood, Mary
Houston, Elizabeth
Howie, Victoria
Hyitt, Barron

IVEY, LiLBURNE

Jackson, Agnes
Jackson, Corinne
Johnson, Lollie
Johnston, Eugenia
Jones, Alice
Justice, Mary Anne
Kelly, Mary
Kerns, Edith
Keiser, Ruth
Keesler, Charlotte

KiNCANNON, M. G.

Knight, Eloise
Knight, Jane
Lainc, Martha
LuTEN, Dorothy
Leak, Concord
Lindsay, Marion
Logan, Josephine
Malvine. Susan
NLarkley. Frances C.
Martin, Marguerite
Mathews, Sarah
Maxwell, Annie Byrd
Meade, Anna
Merrin, Virginia
Middlebrooks, Lilian
muns, susye
Mobbedly. Mary
Moore, Carolyn
Moore. Eliza
Morton. Cora
Morton. Susie Reed
Morton, Sydney
MosiER, Mary Hill
Mltrchison, Lewis
Murchison, Lucia
Myers, Frances
McAlister, Jean
McAlpine, Lilian
McClain. I ois
McClure, Elizabeth
McColcan, Margaret
McDonald. Katherine
McDaw, Margaret
McDonnell. Sara
McFall, Mildred

McLaughlin, Margaret
McLean, Margaret
McLellan. Mary
McLeod, Mary Stuart
McMurbay-, Charlotte
McMuRRAY', Edna
NiCKLES, Mary
Oliver, Laura
Oliver, Lucy
Parry', Lena
Peck, Emily
Peck, Winona
PiRKLE, Ruth
PoLHiLL, Lois
Posey, Valera
Porter, Priscilla
Pottle, Virginia
Powell, Margaret
Preas, Nannabeth
Preston, Janef
Rice, Birdie
Richardson, Cora
RoBiNCUE, Emma Sue
Rushton, Rachel
Samuels, Gertrude
Sanders, Ruth
Saunders, Sophie
Saxon, Eunnie
Seagle, Alma
Sellers, Merle
Sentelle. Claudia
Smith. Margaret
Smith, Melissa
Smith, Pearl
Stansfield, Martha
Stinson, Peyton
Stephen, Althea
Stephenson. Hester
Stewart, Mary
Strauss, Marianna
Stewart, Frances
Stone, Polly
Swaney, Elma
Swann, Fannie
Taliaferro, Martha Lee
Thomas, Augusta
Thomas, Emily
Thorington, Margaret
Turner, Martha
Turner, Sara
Trump, Esther Joy

ViNNEDGE, ReBA

Wade, Margaret
Warden, Marjorie
Waterfield, Catherine
Whitaker. Rosemary
Why'te, Eleanor
Wilson, Ellen
Wilson, Elvie
Wright. Helen

^^

ilaron

Debating took a new interest last fall when plans were made for a triangular
debate between Sophie Newcomb, Randolph-Macon and Agnes Scott. The debate
at Newcomb last spring had aroused all loyal Agnes Scotters to the pitch of build-
ing a bonfire in the drizzling rain, but it was left to the year 1920-1921 to show
what Agnes Scott really could do.

As soon as our triangular debating plans were announced, the two societies
registered all volunteers for debating. Then began the preliminaries, culminating in
an inter-society debate just before Christmas. The subject was, "Resolved, That
the growth in the exercise of presidential leadership has been for the promotion of
the general welfare." Although the Mnemosyneans valiantly upheld their speakers
on the negative as triumphant, the judges decided, by a vote of two to one, that the
affirmative was victorious. The affirmative was defended by Charlotte Bell and
Caroline Agee, the negative by Ruth Scandrett and Anna Marie Landress.

After Christmas new preliminaries were begun on another phase of the presi-
dency, and were gradually leading up to a second inter-society debate, when the
inter-collegiate subject arrived from Randolph-Macon. Thereupon all thoughts
begun running along the line of "compulsory arbitration," and the presidency was left
far in the background. The Council selected six girls, with the four who had
already debated, to work on the inter-collegiate preliminaries. These six were
Frances Charlotte Markley, Eleanor Carpenter and Martha Stansfield from the
Propyleans, and Nell Buchanan, Cama Burgess and Quenelle Harrold from the
Mnemosyneans, who had shown their ability in the society debates.

With these ten as a nucleus, Agnes Scott dived into the perturbed waters of
"compulsory arbitration" and emerged most enthusiastically in April with two teams
one on each side of the disputed question.

Imagine the excitement when three of our best debaters, as defenders of the
negative, left for Randolph-Macon; and when Newcomb's negative team arrived at
A. S. C. to contest the question with A. S. C.'s affirmative team. In the meantime,
we had visions of Randolph-Macon's negative defenders traveling on to New Orleans

A bird's-eye view of a section of the United States from New Orleans to Lynch-
burg might have revealed on a certain memorable night, three debates on the same
subject going on at the same time; and, after the momentous decision of the judges,
six telegrams flashing between the three points, bearing messages, now of triumph,
now of defeat, but always of a valiant struggle on behalf of the winning or losing
cause.

And somehow old A. S. C. seemed bigger and dearer to each one of us, and we
determined to defend her fair name row and forever more.

llarkfnars

Mary Knight
Costume Manager

Sarah Till
Secretary

Rachel Rushton
President

Marguerite Cousins
Vice-President

FACULTY BOARD

Miss McKinney
Miss Laney
Miss Alexander
Miss Wilburn

Sarah Fulton
Treasurer

Helen Hall
Stage Manager

Dr. Armistead
Mr. Johnston
Mr. Stukes
Mr. Cunningham

Miss Gooch, Coach

llarkfnara

Marion Cawthon
Marguerite Cousins
Sarah Fulton
Charlotte Keesler

FULL MEMBERS

Rhea King
Mary Knight
Fannie McCaa

Margaret McLaughlin
Frances Charlotte Markley
Rachel Rushton
Sarah Till

ASSOCIATE MEMBERS

Frances Ames
Jeanette Archer
Dell Bernhardt
Sara Belle Brodnax
Elizaheth Brown
Virginia Bubum
Nell Buchanan
Cama Burgess
Marion Cawthon
Marguerite Cousins
Sara Fulton
Frances Harwell
Helen Hall
Eleanor Hyde
Lollie Johnson
Charlotte Keesler
Rhea King
Mary Knight
Roberta 1 ove
Fannie McCaa

A. B. Maxwell

Mary McLellan

Margaret McLaughlin

Elizabeth McCarrick

Elizabeth McClure

Frances Charlotte Markley

Elizabeth Malloy

Frances Oliver

Laura Oliver

Valeria Posey

Margaret Powell

Louise Pappenheijier

Ruth Pirkle

Rachel Rushton

Lucille Smith

Polly Stone

Martha Talliaferro

Sarah Till

Margaretta Womelsdohf

Mary Ben Wright

r/ie Duke In Banishment Charlotte Keesler

The Usurping Duke Fannie McCaa

Amieus Margaret McLaughlin

Jacques Rhea King

Le Beau Rachel Rushton

Oliver Harriet Noyes

Jacques ( brother of Oliver ) Mrs. Jeter

Orlando Sarah Fulton

Adam Helen Hall

Touchstone Sarah Till

Corine Marion Cawthon

Silvius Elizabeth Brown

William Frances C. Markley

Rosalind . . . . Marguerite Cousins

Celia Lois McIntyre

Phebe Anne Hart

Audrey Emma Jones

Lord Eleanor Hyde

Foresters :
Lucile Smith, Fannie McCaa, Cama Burgess, Mary Knight, Rachel Rushton

1)^ (Bvun iHntl?

The Green Moth Sarah Till

Awkward Bat Rachel Rushton

Little Bobby Brown Anne Jeter

{Dell Bernhardt
Sara Belle Brodnax
r- TT

Frances Harwell
Margaret Hay

r Helen Hall

) Virginia Burum

Broivnies -< , ^

J i.AURA Oliver

I Elizabeth Malloy

Tommie Tim Marguerite Cousins

Maid Harriet Scott

Mother Margaret McLaughlin

Jrpttrlr dlub

Emily Guille
Treasurer

Eleanor Carpenter
Presid?nt

Mildred McFall
Assistant Treasurer

Martha Stansfield
Secretary

Helen Hall
Vice-President

The French Department has long been one of our largest and most popular academic de-
partments. This year, the students, realizing that we should never let our studies interfere with
our education, decided to extend the work beyond the class room, and organized Le Salon Francois.

he Salon Francois! The organization could scarcely have a more appropriate name as an-
alysis will show. First. "Le" although the society is young its members are so loyal that for
them it is certainly THE Salon Francais. "Salon" is a word strongly suggestive of social good
times and that is the key-note of the club. As for "Francais" the society tries to adopt not only
the language but also the esprit of the French.

In its brief career, Le Salon Francais has accomplished great things. Its success is largely
due to Miss LeGate, who has materially aided in organizing and maintaining the club.

(Q2

mn Qllub

LuciLE Smith
Lillian McAlpine
Charlotte Keesler
Jeanette Archer
Alice Whipple
Jessie Watts
Martha Turner
Ida Bearden
RoMOLA Davis
Helen Crocker
Victoria Howie
Eioise Knight
Jane Knight

Ruth Almond
Ruth Spence
Pete Farmer
Evelyn Byrd
Nell Esslincer
Caroline Moody
Margaret McLaughlin
Elizabeth Lockhart
Frances Gilliland
Carrie Scandrett
Sara Matthews
Ruth Pirkle
Margaret Yeacer

Agn^B Btatt (Halh^t (^l^flral ^cmtji

DIRECTOR:
Lewis H. Johnson

SOLOISTS:
Miss Ethel Curry
Miss Mary Lansing
Charles Browning
J. Foster Barnes

ORGANIST:
Prof. C. W. Dieckmann

SOPRANOS:
LuciLE Smith
LuLiE Harris
Romola Davis
Alice Whipple
Jeanette Archer
Jessie Watts
Eloise Knight
Helen Crocker
Victoria Howie
Martha Turner
Lillian McAlpine
Ruth Spence
Laurie Bell Stubrs
Augusta Brewer
Lillian Middlebrooks
Sarah Boswell
Mrs. Chas. Carter
Mrs. Lewis H. Johnson

CONTRALTOS:

Nell Esslincer
Margaret McLaughlin
Caroline Moody
Elizabeth Lockhart
Annie Earle Farmer
Ruth Pirkle
Ruth Almond
Sara Mathews
Margaret Yeager
Carrie Scandrett
Frances Gilliland
Margaret Wade
Marianne Strauss
Janet Newton
Edythe Clarke
Annette Carter
Mrs. B. R. Becker

TENORS:
William Lovelace
Albert Doreman
William Fresborn
Charles Hamilton
Warren Matthews
Ed Carswell

BASSES:
William Talley
Charles Carter
Clyde Hicginbotham
Davis Ellis
Elwin Peabody'
Leo Partin

(tt\}tBtYU

olins
LuciLE Smith
Elizabeth Stroud
Anna Harwell
Agnes Adams

Charlotte Keesler, Director
Pianist

Mandolins Guitars

Louise Fluker Eleanor Hyde

Nancy Evans Edythe Clarke

Maud Foster Frances Whitfield

Helen F'aw Elizabeth Smith

Ukeleles

Julia Jameson
Virginia Pottle
Lucy Wooten

Stealthily, stealthily, steathily onward, straight to the fire bell the fire chieftan
lumbered. "Forward the Fire Brigade! Charge, Bucketeers!" he said, cruelly awak-
ening those who slumbered. "Forward the Fire Brigade!" was anyone dismayed?
Grabbing wet towels in the darkness, they blundered. Their's not to make reply,
their's not to reason why, their's not to heave a sigh as downward they lumbered.
Lieutenants to the right of them. Lieutenants to the left of them. Lieutenants all in
front of them, cried words thundered. Shooed at on every side, would that you
them had spied, as down to the lobby crawled, senseless and stupid, those who had
slumbered. Flashlights with cruel glare showed each one's vacant stare, as standing
with towel there, why such a fate was her's sleepily wondered. Plunged deep in
great dismay on everything they lay Senior and Freshman reeling from sleep I
say, while roll call was thundered. Then they climbed back, poor things, from
their dreams aroused. Lieutenants to the right of them. Lieutenants to the left of
them, Lieutenants all in front of them, cruel words thundered. Shooed at on every
side, gloomy and mystified, came from the Fire Drill, came from the lobby wide,
dragging their towels, those who had slumbered.

When can their glory fade? Oh, the wild charge they made ! All the school
wondered. Honor the drill they made! Honor the fire brigade, you who had
slumbered.

FIRE BRIGADE.

Inman Hall Chief, Eunice Dean; First Lieutenant, Beth McClure; Second
Lieutenants, Frances Young, Quenelle Harrold, Sarah Till, Emily Guill, Ivylyn Girar-
deau, Josephine Gardner.

Chief of Bucket Brigade Lilburne Ivey.

Members Minnie Allen, Sarah Mathews, Concord Leak, Frances Stuart, Ruth
Craig, Frances Amis.

Rebekah Scott Chief, Augusta Brewer; First Lieutenant, Cama Burgess;
Second Lieutenants, Alice Whipple, Gena Callaway, Catherine Waterfield, Christine
Evans, Margaretta Womelsdorf, Coma McCaskill, Margaret Hay, Jeanette Archer,
Elizabeth Stroud, Anne Earl Farmer, Lucy Wooten, Pearl Smith.

Chiefs of Buckett Brigade Charlotte Keesler, Julia Jameson, Annie Elizabeth
Brown, Emma Herman, Nancy Evans, Dell Bernhardt, Margaret Yeager.

Main Chief, Julia Watkins; First Lieutenant, Polly Stone; Second Lieutenants,
Josephine Logan, Lewis Murchison, Ruth Wilking, Victoria Howie, Lois Moriarity,
Louise Dean Stevens, Marjorie Lowe, Frances Arant.

Chiefs of Bucket Brigade Alice Virden, Augusta Guerry, Elma Swaney,
Augusta Cannon, Lois McClain, Dorothy Bowron, Sidney Morton.

White House First Lieutenant, Sara Louise Hunter.

Bucket Brigade Sarah Brandon, Agnes Jackson.

LuPTON First Lieutenant, Ruth Hall.

Chief of Bucket Brigade Lina Parry, Mary Stewart.

1. i, I,

OFFICERS

Frances Charlotte Markley President

Laura Oliver Secretary

MEMBERS

Janef Preston

Elizabeth Enloe

Mary Anne Justice
Rhea King

Elizabeth Wilson

Eloise Knight

Polly Stone

Althea Stephens

Sarah Stansell

LuciLE Little

B. 0. Z. is the literary club open to Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors. New
members are admitted through try-out stories, which are impartially judged by the
Club. This is the oldest of the literary clubs of Agnes Scott and is honored
accordingly.

Jnltn Ollub

OFFICERS

Helen Faw
LuciLE Little

President
Secretary

MEMBERS

Lucile Little

Polly Stone

Marjorie Lowe

Marjorie Warden

Mary Goodrich

Edith Ruff

Janice Brown

Elizabeth Askew
Helen Faw

Folio is the literary club composed of Freshmen. Try-outs are held twice a year
by stories submitted to the club members and there is no ambitious Freshman who
does not cast a longing eye at Folio.

FRESHMEN MEMBERS

Minnie Allen

Mary Colly

Mary Green

Lillian McAlpine

Winona Peck

ISABELLE SeWELL.

Elizabeth McCarrick

c 1. 1.

OFFICERS

Frances Charlotte Markley President

Frances Harper Vice-President

Alice Virden Secretary and Treasurer

Dr. McCain Faculty Member

MEMBERS

Jeanette Archer
Nell Buchanan
Eleanor Carpenter
Frances Harper
Eleanor Hyde
F. C. Markley
Janef Preston

Alice Virden
LiLBURNE Ivy
Mary Barton

Daisey Frances Smith
Mary H. Greene

Sarah Till

K. U. B. is a new organization at Agnes Scott and one to be proud of. Organ-
ized in the spring of 1920, with six charter members, it has as its aim to bring Agnes
Scott before the public and to arouse interest through journalistic contributions to
the newspapers. The Journalism Club satisfies a long-felt need in the literary talent
at Agnes Scott.

damma ait Alpl^a

FACULTY MEMBERS

Miss Lucile Alexander
Dr. J. D. M. Armistead
Miss Agatha Brown
Mrs. C. W. Dieckman
Mrs. Margaret Fitzhugh
Miss Augusta Skeen

Miss Frances Sledd
Miss Cleo Hearon
Mr. Robert Holt
Miss Janet Newton
Miss Lillian Smith
Mr. H. L. Painter

1906
Ida Lee Hill (Mrs. L T. Irwin)

Lizzabel Saxon

1908

1909

Anne M. Waddell

Ruth Marian (Mrs. Lois Wisdom I

1911

Mary Wallace Kirk

1912

Cornelia Cooper
Anne McLane

1913

Janie McGaughey

Emma Moss Pope (Mrs. C. W. Dieckman

1914

Annie Jenkins

Louise McNulty

Kathleen Kennedy

Essie Roberts

Marguerite Wells (Mrs. Robert Bishop

1915

Marion Black
Gertrude Briesenick
Catherine Parker
Mary H. Schneider
Mary West

1916
Laura Cooper
Elizabeth Burke
Jeanette Victor
Grace Geohegan
Louise Wilson
Ray Harrison

1917
India Hunt

Katherine Lindamood
Janet Newton
Margaret Pruden
Augusta Skeen
May Smith
Frances Thatcher

1918
Katherine Seay
Emma Jones
Lois Eve
Elizabeth Denman (Mrs. P. Hammond I

1919

'Dorothy Thigpen
Margaret Watts
Louise Marshburn
Frances Sledd
Margaret Leech

1920

Laura S. Malloy
Elizabeth Lovett
Mary Burnett
Alice Cooper
Rosalind Wurm

1921

Anna Marie Landress
Janef Preston

m0a0r

ALUMNAE MEMBERS

CLASS OF 1916
Jeanette Victor Eloise Gay

Ora Glenn Alice Weatherly

Martha Ross Evelyn Goode

Maryellen Harvey Ray Harrison

Louise Wilson Nell Frye

CLASS OF 1917
Gjertrud Amundson Regina Pinkston

India Hunt Janet Newton

Spott Payne A. S. Donaldson

Laurie Caldwell Georgiana White

Louise Ware Ruth Nisbet

Anne Kyle V. Y. White

CLASS OF 1918
Margaret Leyburn Ruth Anderson

Samille Lowe Katherine Seay

R. L. Estes Olive Hardwick

Emma Jones Lois Eve

Hallie Alexander

CLASS OF 1919

Lucy Durr Claire Elliot

Frances Glasgow Amelia Hutcheson

Mary Brock Mallard Julia Lake Skinner

Margaret Rowe Llewellyn Wilburn

Dorothy Thigpen Elizabeth Watkins

GoLDiE Ham Lulu Smith

CLASS OF 1920
Elizabeth Allen Laura Stockton Malloy

Margaret Bland Virginia McLaughlin

Lois McIntyre Marian McCamy

Julia Hagood Anne Houston

Louise Slack Mary Burnett

STUDENT MEMBERS
Charlotte Bell Frances Charlotte Markley

Margaret Bell Janef Preston

AiMEE D. Glover Margaret McLaughlin

Ellen Wilson Jean McAlister

Rachel Rushton Fanny McCaa

Anna Marie Landress Charlotte Newton

Alice Jones Dorothy Allen

FACULTY MEMBERS
Dr. McCain Miss MacDougall

Dr Sweet

iF^UouiH

RoMOLA Davis

A.B., 1920

Fellow in Enslish

Elizabeth Marsh

A.B., 1920

Fellow in English and Music

ScLHOoeTTe ^

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ipaDelfofhi

Nell Buchanan, '22 Marion, Va.

Virginia Burum, '23 Augusta, Ga.

AiMEE D. Glover, '21 Marietta, Ga.

Anne Hart, '21 Atlanta, Ga.

Rhea King, '22 Atlanta, Ga.

Lucia Murchison, '22 Golumbia, S. C.

Amy Twitty, '21 Pelham, Ga.

Helen Wayt, '21 Atlanta, Ga.

Margaretta Womelsdorf, '23 Cartersville, Ga.

ULL BO

Jean McAlister, '21 Greensboro, N. C.

Susan Malone '22 Greenwood, Miss.

Mary Knight, '22 Atlanta, Ga.

Charlotte Keesler, '22 Greenwood, Miss.

Margaret Hay, '23 Easton, Pa.

Elizabeth Molloy, '23 Murfreesboro. Tenn.

Anna Harwell, '23 Decatur, Ga.

f ^ ^"'^""^^^-""y ~Vy' '' V

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Dorothy Allen, '21 LaFayette, Ala.

Isabel Carr, '21 Harriman, Tenn.

Caroline Farquhar, '22 Easton, Pa.

Margaret Hedrick, '21 Bristol, Va.

Alice Jones, '21 Jacksonville, Fla.

Ruth Keiser, '22 Birmingham, Ala.

Martha Laing, '21 Lewisburg, W. Va.

Laura Oliver, '22 Montgomery, Ala.

Rachel Rushton, '21 Montgomery, Ala.

'pi Alpba pi)i

Pi Alpha Phi, translated into English, might mean something like "Honorary
Debating Organization." The Debating Council felt that aU the girls working on
the intercollegiate debate were due recognition, and with this in view they selected
the ten girls who had done the best work in the preliminaries to be the charter mem-
bers, and the group from whom the intercollegiate debaters were to be chosen.
These girls were called together by the President of the Debating Council, and
elected as their officers Cama Burgess, president, and Anna Marie Landress, secretary.
The other charter members are Caroline Agee, Charlotte Bell, Nell Buchanan,
Eleanor Carpenter, Quenelle Harrold, Frances Charlotte Markley, Ruth Scandrett
and Martha Stansfield.

It is hoped that the debaters in Newcomb and Randolph-Macon will become
members of this organization during the spring, and that all will be joined together
by the common purpose "To form bodies of representative women who shall by
their interest in debating in the true sense of the word uphold the highest ideals of
liberal education; to furnish the highest reward for conscientious and meritorious
efforts in furthering the best interests of argumentation by election to membership
in the organization."

OFFICERS

Cama Burgess President

Anna Marie Landress Secretary

MEMBERS

Caroline Agee Quenelle Harrold

Charlotte Bell Anna Marie Landress

Nelle Buchanan Frances Charlotte Markley

Cama Burgess Ruth Scandrett

Eleanor Carpenter Martha Stansfield

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Caroliive Farquhar
Trea:urer

Beth McClure
Secretary

Fanny McCaa
President

Miss Wilburn
Coach

Ruth Hall
Song Leader

Miss Wade
Coach

Dorothy Allen
Vice-President

O^jimttaBium

Hockey
Basket-ball

SPORT MANAGERS
Hilda McConnell Hike

Althea Stephens Track

Eugenia Johnston
. Helen Wayt

Physical training? The future Freshman glances with mild interest at that small item in
the catalogue and her eyes take on that absorbed and all-comprehensive dreaminess which they
have been wearing for the last few weeks before her departure for Agnes Scott. She sees herself
in the lecture room taking learned notes on physical education or perhaps dressed trimly like
the magazine girl with faultless suit and sport shoes. How grand she will look! she, one of
the next generation cheeks flushed, head erect, a bright noble look upon her face!

Once arrived at Agnes Scott she, after much contemplation, decides that she had better take
the period before "Trig" that her mind may be refreshed for this her hardest class. At her first
class she gets an exercise card. What a number of forms of charming recreaiton! Her card
will be full. First lessons in marching! Miss Freshman's chin is so tilted that there is a
straight line from tip of nose through rigid finger tips to heels. She cuts corners so sharply
that the air almost cries out in pain. Gym twice a week soon becomes a reality instead of an
aesthetic dream and my Freshman's suit shows signs of wear. The horse! All in line to jump
over. How graceful her sylph-like form will float! Sad reality; when once astride the horse
her legs grow heavy as lead and there she remains perched until dragged off by the instructor.
The Swedish ladder makes rubber bands of every fibre in her poor aching body as she winds
laboriously in and out. The next day mere laughing is agony and climbing stairs an impossibility.
It is wrong for a delicate creature who was made for dancing to go through such clumsy,
unattractive exercises. Her hopes are realized when the next day a dance is demonstrated, and
she gazes on with interest at the mere simplicity of the thing. Blissfully unconscious she spins
around on one toe to find to her great dismay that the rest of the class has long finished spinning
and is gaily tripping away on another step.

The evil hour of exams come and with a coldness as to spine and a lump in the throat our
Freshman takes her place. "To the rear march!" sends our Freshman alone across the floor,
suddenly realizing that she has left her comrades far behind. She gets hung on the horse and
when finally with a monstrous struggle she frees herself she falls on the other side to the com-
plete jarring of her framework. During the dance her eyes are riveted on the star dancer of the
class, sometimes she follows, sometimes she keeps vigorously in motion. The strain is terrific
the music stops and with a sigh that bespeaks extreme relief Miss Freshman sits down and rest-
ing her whirling head on her arm says: "Well, this is gym at Agnes Scott!"

J

>^_^-

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"How did that happen?"' asked the Sympathetic By-
stander, as a girl went by wearing a purple halo around
one eye. "'She got hit playing hockey," replied the Peram-
bulating Information Bureau of the college campus. And
the S. B., going back to the day when it was her heart's
dearest ambition to win a lost game for her team, and be
dragged senseless from the field, easily understood why, in
addition to her black eye, the purblind victim wore a radiant
smile in which triumph and complacent pride were the most
marked elements.

If the S. B. had waited for more information, which
the Bureau was quite willing to impart, she would have
learned that hockey is one of the most popular means, not
only toward a sinewy physique, but toward a big purple
A. S. C, which sets off a white Spalding sweater so be-
comingly. This combination of letters is the souvenir of college life which stands
next dearest in many a graduate's heart to her diploma. For the letters represent
three sterling qualities in the athletic world agility,
strength and courage.

Agility in wielding your hockey stick, so that Miss
Wilburn will not call "sticks" on you, so that you will
avoid assassinating the person next you, and may escape
a like fate at her hands.

Strength in running down to a goal when your throat
and tongue feel like sandpaper and your whole respiratory
system has gone on a strike; when there seems nothing
ahead of you but a long field and a long run, and behind
you a beaten track peppered with hairpins. Then, though
your knees feel as if they must reverse and work the other
way, you must keep on running and hitting the much
enduring ball.

Courage to crawl out on a cold morning before the
rising bell has disturbed the innocent sleep of your less
enterprising friends.

As you wade through the grass with the dew oozing in through your canvas
shoes, and squishing out again, over and over a half forgotten quotation runs

through your head "Heights bv great men
reached and kept were not attained by sudden
flight, but they, while their companions slept "
what's the rest? Well, it must be something
about getting up to practice for a hockey game.
Then waste no pity, Sympathetic Bystander,
on the girl with the purple halo, for know that
she possesses all the above qualities, and many
more, in addition to her black eye.

l|0rk?y cErauis

SENIORS
Helen Wayt
Jean McAlister
EuLA Russell (Mgr.)
Margaret McLaughlin
Dot Allen ( Capt. )
Charlotte Newton
Caroline Acee .
Alice Jones . .
Margaret Wade
Myrtle Blackmon
Marion Cawthon

SUBS
Aimee D.' Glover
Augusta Brewer
Anna Marie Landress

SOPHOMORES
. Center Foncard ... - Hilda McConnell (Capt.)

Right Inside Forivard Merle Sellers

Left Inside Forward . . Nannie Campbell

Right Wing Gertrude Samuels

Lejt Wing Margaret Hay

Center Halfback Beth McClure

Right Halfback Eloise Knight

Left Halfback Emily Guille (Mgr.)

Right Fullback Margaret Brenner

Left Fullback ... . Caroline Farquhar
Goal Keeper Mary Goodrich

SUBS
Eugenia Pou
M. Womelsdorf
Valeria Posey
Eleanor Hyde

I^nrkpg ilimmB

JUNIOR

Mary Knicht Center Forward .

Ethel Ware (Capt.l . . Right Inside Forward

Althea Stephens Left Inside Forward

Frances Harper (Mgr. ) . ...

JuAMTA Kelly

Elizabeth Wilson
Susan Malone

LiLBURNE IVEY

Alice Whipple

Lucia Murchison Lejt Fullback

Ruth Virden Goal Keeper

SUBS
Mary Flodinc
Ruth Pirkle
Edith Kerns
Helen Barton
Eunice Dean

FRESHMAN
. Sarah McDowell
Anna Meade
. Marion Johnson

Right W^ing Elizabeth Dabney

Lett Wing Eljia Svvaney

Center Halfback . . Winona Peck (Capt.)

Right Halfback Augusta Thomas

Left Halfback ...... Nancy Evans (Mgr.)

Right Fullback Lucy Oliver

Lewis Murchison

Minnie Allen

SUBS
Daisy Smith
Margaret Powell
Caroline Calloway

(Q2)

SCCHOUc 1

9 2)

i;|S.:;

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Who doesn't get excited at the thought of them?
Whether they come in the afternoon or late in the evening,
whether you're hiking for your coveted class numerals, or
to help fill up a sadly blank exercise card, or even to
enjoy a brisk walk in the country; no matter which, there's
no doubt about the fun to be had, judging from the huge
crowds of us who go, booted and spurred for the occasion,
with a string of tin cups for the coffee and mysterious bun-
dles which contain everybody's favorite kind of camping
food. Besides all this there is the advantage of "seeing
the country" and learning more about the environs on
Agnes Scott and our geographical location.

Every year hiking becomes more popular and now,
since it is one good way to earn numerals, its popularity
still increases; for everybody loves to hike, not to men-
tion to eat, as well. There are many girls who don't play basket-ball, hockey, or
tennis, but everybody does something, and hikes never fail to arouse athletic enthu-
siasm, as well as healthy appetites. This year it was resolved that in order to win
class numerals, a girl must attend eight hikes out of the ten which are given; this
plan met with unusual success, for the majority of the girls won numerals.

But the hikes themselves are the most interesting part. We are always looking
forward to the rext one, and as soon as a tempting poster appears on the athletic
bulletin board with a blank sheet of paper below it, there is a grand rush to sign
up in time to go. Then at the appointed hour we all gather in front of Main Build-
ing with our fifteen cents in our pocket and our low-heeled shoes on. After we have
walked and worked up our above-mentioned appetite, we stop and build a huge
bonfire, put on the coffee pot, roast our juicy "weenies," sizzle the hot bacon in the
frying pan, make crisp toast, and sometimes oh, those sometimes! when our
fifteen cents per capita has stretched far enough, we have marshmallows delicious
toasted ones, which just touch the spot. And oh, that grand, big fire! The next
best thing to helping build it is sitting by it. But the best of times must end, and
this one has ended after we have put out the last sparks of the fire and begun our
A. S. C.-ward tramp, for on the way home we sing our songs and enjoy ourselves
generally, realizing how much hikes add to our athletics. And the hikers are all
real Hottentots, for as soon as we reach the gates of A. S. C. and our fun is over
until the next time, we give fifteen 'rahs for
'Genie Johnson, our hike manager. Everybodv
knows that the hike manager is an all-around
girl, full of Hottentot pep and enthusiasm and
inspiring the same in everyone else. All due
praise to 'Genie, for about 150 girls adonted
hiking this year, and if you ask any of them
about it, they'll say that those certainly were
the "sood old times."

laakpt-Sall

The king of sports is basket-ball, though many say not
so; and those who like it not at all, they must be fat and
slow. O, listen to my song of praise, I'll tell you of its joys,
a eulogy to it I'll raise, and make a joyful noise.

If you are thin, 'twill make you fat, but not the other
way; 'twill make you graceful as a cat, you'll lightly trip
and sway. But as you trip, I pray take care, and think
before you leap; or you may wave your feet in air, all
doubled in a heap. If you should find your breath is short,
this game is not for you; for if you cough and gasp and
snort, your heart does not beat true. If you take up this
lively game, your color comes and goes; for natural beauty
you'll have fame, and blush just like the rose. But to the
strong this sport belongs, for them it is great fun; so let me
shout my feeble songs, and then I will be done.
In speed it beats the aeroplane, it's never dull or
slow; play in the sunshine or the rain, no difference you'll
know. In other sports when weather's bad, it puts them
on the blink: this court can never make you mad, or
heated phrases think. The ball is big enough to hit,
"twill not elude your grasp; I've often seen golfers fling
a fit, with helpless rage they gasp, because they think
they've made a stroke, they dance with joyful glee; but
you should hear them yell and choke, with the ball still
on the tee. The basket-ball is never still, it flies around
and round; sometimes it may be thrown to kill, and stretch
you on the ground. The air with shining stars is bright,
you wonder where you are; then up you jump with all
your might, and throw that ball quite far to hit the one
who knocked you out, while every spiteful name and
heated words you madly shout, so wags this merry game.

The fans all say it can't be beat, they struggle to get
in; they yell and clap with hands and feet, and make an
a\vful din. They scale the walls and sit upon the bars
and window sills, and here they think it is great fun, in
gym they say it kills. They sit on the piano top, upon the
horse and bars; frenzied fear or joy they hop, shout
praises to the stars. They fill the gym with savage yells,
and you would surely wonder, what's happened to the erst-
while belles, with voices now like thunder. 0, basket-ball's
a royal sport, by all athletes adored; but I will cut my
praises short, for fear you might be bored.

^ftttor laakrt-lall (Upam

Center

Augusta Brewer. (Capt. and Mgr.J
Fannie McCaa

Side Center

Caroline Acee

Forwards

Helen Wayt
Margaret McLaughlin
Genie Johnston

Guards

Jean McAlister
Elizakfth Floding

^opl^nmnr? laskft-lall Emm

Center

Lois McClain

Side Center

Elizabeth Hoke

Margaret Hay (Manager)
Elizabeth McClure (Captain)

Guards-

EUGENIA Pou
Lois Moriarty
Caroline Farquhar

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Center

Althea Stephens (Manager)

LiLBDRNE IVEY
Side Center

Roberta Love
Lucia Murchison

Forivards

Ethel Ware (Captain)
Frances Harper
Ruth Virden
Laura Belle Stubhs

Guards

Alice Whipple
Susan Malone
Mary McLellan

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Center

Anna Meade
Victoria Howie

Side Center

Augustat Thomas (Captain)
Lewis Murchison

Forwards

Winona Peck (Manager)
Sarah McDowell

Nancy Evans
Gladys Spruell

Guard:

--Kate Harrell

Lillian McAlpine

Daisy Frances Smith

Lucy Oliver
Subs Elizabeth Epes, Martha Eakes

(Q2

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^^^^ Tennis is just about the most universal sport known,

.'^' BsMfaa^^SsBMHH regardless of sex, age, size, or skill. Everybody plays

tennis in some degree, though comparatively few indulge
in hockey and basket-ball, and even hiking does not quite
come up to tennis in public favor. It's such a convenient
game it can be fast or slow, swift and breathless or only
mildly invigorating, as you wish. It can be a duet "And
let the rest of the world go by" or, if you so desire, a
quartette. Even the language of tennis is designed to thrill
an entrance; and what a world of meaning can be con-
tained in the simple words, "thirty, love," whether accom-
Ijl^^ panied by shy glances from underneath lowered lashes, or

'-^^^^^^^.B i^y 3 victorious lifting of the head and a proud note of

^B^TPv^ triumph in the voice!

'- ^ ^Si^ Where is the soul so dead that it has not felt within

itself the stirrings of the desire and a feeling of power
to become a mighty champion, if only time could be found? Who has not imagined
himself or herself on the court at a national, or even international, tournament,
surrounded by a huge and wonder-struck crowd of onlookers, breathless with ad-
miration and wonder at the skill and daring of this new champion? And in his dream
he sees himself easily overcoming last year's champion, and accepting his victory
with graceful and becoming modesty, while all the former winners gasp in awe and
adoration before this prodigy.

Perhaps none of us here are destined for such high triumph but who knows?
We can at least make a beginning. The three excellent courts here offer fine oppor-
tunities for incipient champions, and who can resist the call of a well-kept tennis
court on a glorious spring day, when all the world is calling us to come and play?
Whether it be a match game or merely for the love of playing, tennis is the source
of joy and pleasure to practically everybody. And even if we cannot be champions
ourselves, there are few sports more interest-compelling to watch. There is a cer-
tain exhilaration in seeing the ball fly back and forth over the net, in watching the
swiftness and skill of the players, in the almost involuntary exclamations of admira-
tion called forth by some unexpected or unusual stroke, or of sympathy for an
unfortunate mistake on the part of a good
player. Every year tournaments are held in
singles and doubles between classes, and the
winners of these play for the college champion-
ship. Last year the singles cup went to Marion
McCamy for the Seniors, and to Ruth Brown
and Georgia Weaver for the Sophomores. This
year a good many of our old "famous players"
are gone, and some new and unforeseen talent
is expected. Come on, get your racquet, and
let's have a game!

-> b^^C^

(Q

]fuih lay

OUR TRACK MEET.

That's where everybody shines, thin, fat, short and
tall! There isn't anybody who can't do something in track
and the number of Agnes Scott athletes who participate in
it proves its advantages, if the track manager, Helen Wayt,
should fail to prove them. It is the most varied of all
forms of athletics, for its numerous stunts provide
opportunities for every kind of exercise. There is the dis-
cus throw, which requires a strong arm; and hurdling,
which every girl longs to perform, because it is so difficult
to do in good form; the hop-skip-and-jump is popular, too,
because almost everyone has done it at one time or another;
then the relay race furnishes fun for the spectators, for

each is expecting her class to win; lastly come the 75-yard

and 100-yard dashes; oh, how those quick, little athletes

can run! That is what brings the whole crowd to its toes

rooting for dear life. Of course the race must be won,

and unluckily for the other classes, only one girl can win

it, and she brings to her class first place in the dash.

The annual track meet is the zenith in the career of

athletics at Agnes Scott, for it comes at the end of the

season. There isn't anyone who wouldn't think of coming

out to root for her class supporters, first place in any

of the feats wins for the class a certain number of points

toward the athletic cup; it also entitles the winning girl

to her class numerals. Another good thing about the

track meet is that it is held in the spring; and this is the
time when the mothers flock to Agnes Scott, because the
time is so long between Christmas and Commencement.
So we get to show the family that we are really making
good away off here at Agnes Scott.

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Wearers of the A. S.

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Center Joyce Alexander

Side Center Katherine McDonald Forwards Ruth Brown

Mary Kelly Mildred McFall (Captain

and Manager)

Guards Margaret Neal
Sidney Newton
Jeanette Landrum

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^\\i ffiall nf Spring

Spring comes floating through the world,
And fluttering breezes everywhere

Begin to bloiv with softest breath
The little blossoms from her hair.

She hastens on from hill to hill
And highly poised on silver feet

She gives to eager echoes round

Her low clear call, so haunting sweet

That in the winter-weary world

It is forever, ever heard.
And in the hidden hearts

The old sweet dreams to life are stirred.

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In every cool green

wooalana '^lace
vvnere ne er is neara

the voice of man,
Spring low whiskers

in the trees
Ana nym.'^ns dance

to the Vi;^es o Pan.

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In magic days

of old romance.
And tri;^;^ing feet,

with hearts aglow.
Love and Laughter

lea;f) to music
And Pierrette dances

with Pierrot.

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rLearing her,

the wild jlowers wake.
Ana this dear

ritual of yore:
Hans and Gretchen

quaintly hang
Sweet jy[ay haskets

on the door.

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On dreamy south winds

-floats the call
To lands where knighthood

IS in flower, /

And cavalier Incurs out f?

his song
To dark-eyed lady

in her power.

Two lovers of a

stately grace
^X^y'tJii'n a garden

stately ;^lannea;
The low sweet call

of Spring floats in
Ana George oenas low

o'er J^artha s nana.

Each wee lassie

has a laaaie
As to school

she walks a-^art;
But the laaaie s

feet go straying
Following Spring who s

stol n his heart.

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From wandering where

the far roads go
Eager feet

will not he still
VC^hen flowers wake

the world again
And Spring is calling
from each mil.

I '^'3

There's not one type, there are hundreds.

The witty, the thoughtful, the gay,
Impulsive, reserved, independent,

And others who seek in the day:
Truth with unquenchable hunger;

Wisdom that they may know
Service a zeal for others;

Light of unfailing glow.

Yet while we are naming the many

The fickle, the constant, the sad.
The graceful, sincere, and efficient.

The naive, the stately, the glad.
We're glad to know as fall comes 'round

And the bright leaves fall in whirls
That there's the same love of right in all

Of the true Agnes Scott girls.

^ ^

Amiable-

Elizabeth McClure

Amiable,
Lovable,

Considerate and kind:
Beth McClure,
To be sure.

Lucky was the find.

Gav-

LuciLE Smith

Gay as the lark

And as sweetly she sings,
With the untiring spark

Of laughing at things.

When breakfast bell rings
To the coming of dark.

Gay as the lark

And as sweetly she sings.

JCTTC

(Q2)J

Lewis Murchison

Naive is a word

That does quite ivell
In saying a thing

That words can't tell.
For who could picture

The innocent ways
Of Lewis our child

With her friendly gaze.

Efficient-

Anna Marie Landress

Efficient needs but to be said

And at once there comes to the
mind
The thought of a girl ivho is true
And thoughtful and earnest and
kind.

She once won the scholarship, too.

hi debating the judges agree
The points were most logically pled.

For the speaker was Anna Marie.

^(LHOO

Sunny EUGEMA JOHNSTON

Sunny as the dandelions
And daisies growing wide.

When Genie comes she brings the
light
That likes to lurk outside.

She's rarely seen ivithout a smile.

We alivays do adore it:
But when the finals come around

We're ready to implore it.

Stately Margaret McLaughlin

Stately as the long-stemmed rose
And like the rose most fair.

The fragrance of her nature
Is scattered everywhere^

We love to hear her speak so soft,
But more to hear her sing;

These tributes among many
To Margaret we bring.

Id.

Carefree-

Eugenia Pou

Carefree she was sauntering along

Across the grass one day;
We called her for a moment

And said, "Oh tell us, pray.
We'd tike to find, Eugenia Pou,

What is it that you know.
Or is it lack of troubles

That keeps you smiling so?"

Or

il

Polly Stone

"Original theories are very good,
Said Miss Mac D. to Polly,

"But when the finals come around
You'll find them not so jolly."

But Polly's wits could not be stopped.
Originality could not tarry.

So she wrote a play for a man
Telling him hoiv to marry.

Thoushtful

Janef Preston

Thoughtful of others.
Whatever her mood;

Writer of poetry.
Pensively wooed.

Lover of beauty.
But rarely blind

To the false that also
May lie behind.

Trustworthy Margaret Wade

Trustworthy and unfailing

As the rising of the sun;
Her work ever availing

Trustworthy and unfailing;
And Margaret's never wailing

Of ivork that's to be done;
Trustworthy and unfailing

As the rising of the sun.

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Graceful-

Caroline Farquhar

Graceful girls there are in numbers.

We see them everywhere;
Mav day cast's not hard to choose.

Girls with brown or golden hair.
But there's a grace that's different.

And few like Caroline
Have the grace that's natural

And rises from within.

Independent-

AiMEE D. Glover

Independent,

Little she cares
What she says;

She takes no dares.
"What I think true

Is what I say;
And what I think right

Is what I do.'

Marguerite Watkins

Reserved, and inscrutable.

Is Marguerite's face.
But little concealing

An inborn grace.
Of ivhat she is thinking

She may not tell,
But passing events

Have shown quite well.

Loyal-

Jean McAlister

Loyal the girls of A. S. C,

But one most loyal of all:
True we ever strive to be.

Loyal are all at A. S. C/,
And Jean McAlister certainly

Most loyal we would call.
Loyal are all at A. S. C,

But Jean most loyal of all.

(Q2

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Sincere-

Nannie Campbell

Sincere friends are true friends.

And true friends are rare
As rare as girls like Nannie,

Here or anywhere.
Pleasant and lovable.

True and sincere,
Il^s girls like Nannie Campbell

fFho make our college dear.

So if

you 11 have

From

all of us.

One

ivho would be the

type.

Just add these all together

And

of her you 11 then

have

sight-

Amiable

Sincere

Gay

Graceful

Carefree

Independent

Naive

Original

Reserved

Efficient

Trustworthy

Loyal

Stately

Thoughtful

Sunny

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Chapter I

SOPHOMORE WEEK

Sophomore week! Wow!

Ever since '24 landed at Agnes Scott they had heard rumors of Sophomore Week,
but day after day rolled by and nothing happened. And then suddenly the blow fell.
Announcements were read out in each dining room commanding the Freshmen, and
inviting the college community to come to the chapel immediately after supper.
Everybody went, of course, and after the Sophomores had quieted the audience with
their short, terrifying "shooes," the chapel doors slowly opened and up the aisle
filed a long black line the Sophomore committee! They took their places on the
stage, and the Sophomore president read the rules and regulations by which the
Freshmen were to be governed during the following week.

Oh, the terrible things that Sophomore president read! It was a wonder that
the ground didn't open up and swallow her, or at least that the faculty didn't rise
up and say she was going too far. But on the contrary, the faculty actually giggled!
How could they, when it had just been decreed that the Freshmen must forget about
their ear-puffs and submit to pigtails for a week? Oh, the immodesty of letting
one's ears show!

As for green ribbon ! The Freshmen had visions of buying out all Atlanta's
supply, for shoes were to be laced with it, and bows of the horrible stuff were to
tie jingling bells on the end of each pigtail. A placard must be worn with one's

name printed on it in letters four inches high think of
the awful publicity! Each Freshman must skip as she goes
across the colonade; she must salute all old girls; she must
bow before entering a doorway; and worst indignity of all,
she must do without knife and fork for the entire week and
eat with a spoon only.

After the Sophomore committee had filed out, the Juniors
took the poor Freshmen kindly in hand and fitted them up
with bells and placards and ribbon.

Sophomore week began on Thursday, and on Friday
night its climax came the friendly visit! Sleepy Fresh-
men were ousted from their beds by Sophomores and made
to roll pencils up the hall with their noses, to scramble like

an egg, to boil like a radiator, to tell jokes and then search frantically for the points

under the mattresses. Oh, it was awful !

On the last night of Sophomore week, the dread Sophomore committee met

once more and meted out punishment to those Freshmen who had broken any of their

rules during the week. Yet even that is now pure joy to look back upon!

End all things must, and so at last Sophomore week was over. '24 breathed a

sigh of relief and '23 a sigh of regret that when Sophomore week rolls around again

they will have no part in it.

^^S^.. CO 2

Sophomore Stunt
Chapter II

STUNT NIGHT

Speaking of exciting times! Freshman-Sophomore stunt night was just about
the most exciting time of the whole year. At least the yells and cheers were louder
than for any game of the whole athletic season.

Both Freshman and Sophomore classes began to plan for stunt night the minute
they arrived in the fall, and such secrecy as they each preserved! Meetings were
held in the chapel with all the shades down and girls stationed at the doorsi to be
sure no member of the other class was snooping around outside with her ear to the
key-hole.

Morning, noon and night the two casts practiced, and after every rehearsal,
each class declared gleefully, "We've got that cat; their stunt simply can't be as cute
as our's."

The great night arrived at last and the chapel was packed and jammed. Beside
every member of our own faculty and student body there were Atlanta and Decatur
people, and dozens and dozens of Emory and Tech dates.

The Juniors and Freshmen snaked in, singing "Hail, Freshmen, hail," and the
Sophs and Seniors followed, cheering for the Sophomores.

The Freshmen gave their "Bloomin' Stunt" first, and "Oh, look," ran through
the audience as the curtain went up on Act I, for there on the stage was a garden,
with vegetables on one side and lovely flowers on the other. The flowers began to
talk together in a condescending way of the vegetables, when the mistress and the
gardener entered, arguing as to the placing of a sun dial. They had not yet decided
when the curtain fell. In Act II the worm of conceit comes upon the scene. He is

scorned by the vegetables and crawls over to the flowers. In Act III the mistress
and the gardener are astonished to find the flowers all eaten up by the worm of con-
ceit, but the vegetables are so sturdy and fresh that they decided to place the sun
dial there. The applause was tremendous, especially from the Freshman side of
the chapel, for it was quite apparent that the silly flowers represented the Sopho-
mores and the sturdy vegetables the Freshmen.

The Sophomore stunt was one of the cleverest little farces ever given at the
College. Its scene was laid at the court of King Senior and Queen Junior. The
curtain rose upon King Senior flirting outrageously with Miss Diploma, a court
lady. Wlien the ei tire court had assembled. King Senior sends his two sons. Prince
Klenerus, the Sophomore, and Prince Silius, the Freshman, out into the world to
seek their fortunes, promising to hand over his kingdom to the one who brings home
the most beautiful princess.

In the second act we see Prince Klenerus in a forest of shoo trees, pursued by
gifts. His search for a princess has been unrewarded, and he has just resolved to
take home the next thing he sees, when a black cat rushes out on the stage, pursued
by a tea-hound. The prince saves the cat, and calling an ani-mule, sets out for home.

In Act III the King is on the point of handing his kingdom over to Prince Silius
and his bride, when Prince Klenerus arrived. Much to the. astonishment of the
court the cat is transformed into a beautiful princess, who wins the heart of Prince
Klenerus and also the Kingdom of King Senior.

When the curtain fell the applause was deafening, and the Sophs and Freshmen
continued to re- d the air with cheers and yells until the judges returned with their
decision for the Freshmen! Pandemonium broke lose among the triumphant
Freshmen at the decision, for the biggest feather a Freshman class can wear in its
cap is the winning of the stunt. It is something "24 mav well remember always
with pride.

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Freshman Stunt

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In all the round of a college day
The hours are sad, the hours are gay,
hit the hours that flee most quickly by
Yet longest with the Senior bide
Are those with a Sophomore by her side.

The youthfulness of the grandmother? at Agnes Scott has always heen very evident. Though
the Freshmen appreciated the kindly attention and protecting arm of their new college grand-
mothers, yet it was not until these girls gave their charges a party that they developed into the
real gray-haired, soft-voiced dear old ladies who smooth over everyone's troubles. When time
for the partv came, there were all the grandmothers in their shawls and full, rustling skirts, bidding
their fluffy beruffled grandchildren welcome. Very soon the big fireplace acted as a magnet
upon the children and they left off social courtesies to gather tumultuously about the good old-
timey crackling log fire. The grandmothers need not have had any fear for what they would
do to amuse the children, for as soon as all the greetings had been exchanged and everyone's
bare knees had been roasted by the fire a big circle was formed for "drop the handkerchief."
When the lively creatures were worn out and breathless there was another joy in store.

Now all grandmothers know that every normal child has a keen liking for stories, and so
the good "Uncle Remus" was chosen and many of his narratives were told. For a delightful
while all were in the fascinating company of the clever and charming "Brer Rabbit" who in
spite of his many difficulties always managed to outwit Brer Fox.

After everyone had sat still for a while, the question which comes to every grandchild when
she visits her grandma was written over the eager faces of the happy crowd seated about the
fire. The grandmothers knew that each brain was working hard trying to guess whether there
could possibly be anything back in the pantry in the cookie box. Very quietly then, as is the
way with all nice grandmammas some of them slipped away to come back laden with such piles
of cookies that the children's eyes grew wide with amazement. Lemonade in abundance also
appeared and mints the most wholesome of all candies for children. Who could help but be
happy with such things to eat and with the loveliest of grandmothers all beaming upon you?

When each grandchild had eaten all she really could, one all-seeing little grandma spied
a gown and reminded all that it was past bed-time for old folks and young folks alike. So away
the children scattered to dream of Uncle Remus,

(921

SfflfrtioiiB of a iaij g'luiif tit

If Aurora ever strikes or retires from business we are sure her duty of ushering in the dawn
will be assigned to us, for we have had much practice in that "rosy colored" art. Aesthetic sun-
rises and sunsets we see enough of them to make poets of us all! But alas, one's soul cannot
take flights to the ethereal regions when one is cold and harrassed by the perversity of Carmen.
The exquisite beauty of an early sunrise is said to have inspired the following lines:

Yoa mu-t wake and call me early, call me early. Mother dear.
Tomorrow I'll be the sleepiest girl and will not ever hear.
When the alarm clock rin^s. Mother, for I'm the laziest lass
When I have an eight o'clock class. Mother, I have an eight o'clock class.
1 sleep so sound all night. Mother, that I shall never wake.
If you do not call me loud when the day begins to break.
For I must gather loads of books, and rush to join the mass;
For I have an eight o'clock class. Mother, I have an eight o'clock class.

"Pity the poor day pupils." sigh our sympathetic friends gratefully thankful that they are.
not one of us. Pity us indeed we don't need pity. Do we look thin and down-trodden? We
are just as healthy and pretty as our dormitory sisters even if we do have on dark wool dresses
and rubbers when everyone else is blossoming in white. (How are we to know at six o'clock
what the fickle weather will be at ten?) Then the Decatur street car furnishes us with no
end of diversions and entertainments, as well as an interesting element of mystery (almost
as hair-raising as a deep-dyed detective story) for we really never know whether we will reach
our destination one or two hours late, while there is always a probability of not getting there
at all. And while the motorman is taking the car to pieces or eating breakfast in a nearby drug
store we have ample time to improve our imagination by tning to put the same old excuse in
a new setting. Don't waste your sympathy on us. you long^'aced boarders who see us stagger-
ing in and out at those unearthly hours, for we see and enjoy more life in one day than you do
in months.

Sl)f Fa ^onm

Um um um! Heavenly aromas! You cast an uneasy glance at the quarter reposing so
temptingly in your pocket. Still more of those tantalizing whiffs cause great consternation in the
olfactory regions! Of course you really ought to save money, but well, one must eat. you know,
and what is a C[uarter more or less when you feel that irresistible call of the tea room?

The tea room, sponsored by our Alumnae who know the direct way to a girl's heart and
pocket-book, is the coziest, prettiest place imaginable with silhouettes of belles of the long: ago
on the walls and gai.y painted tables with softly shaded lights. Just exactly like the tea room you
read about in novels where the handsome hero with soulful eyes asks the fatal question as he
tenderly presses the heroine's little soft hand beneath the table. But there are no men here to
ask questions and really you couldn't answer them if there were, for when in the tea room you
give yourself wholly over to the pleasures and delights of culinary art And such delights
there are! Delicious chocolate pie with meringue, steaming soup that defies the cold winds,
nice crisp doughnuts sprinkled with sugar, the daintiest kinds of sandwiches that disappear as
if by magic, marvelous hot chocolate that is guaranteed to revive drooping spirits and wbnder-
ful salads of all 57 varieties. The most fickle and blase appetites are pleased while the normal
appetites well, you know how quickly those proverbial pangs that have been gnawing for
centuries make their exit when the tray laden with delectable food makes its entry. Your
smile and sweet disposition return immediately and you don't give a fiddle-de-dee if Latin
does come next period.

You remember the times that you didn't have any money and the tea room was beckoning
to you like an enticing siren? What did you do? Why you took your place on the campus
and waited until a promising looking person came in sight. "Hello, Mary, got any money with
you? That's fine, lets go to the tea room. Lni, um! Don't those doughnuts smell de-e-licious?"

iHag iaa

"Oh, to be in England now that April's there," wrote
the poet Browning when he was far away from his native
land, but the Agnes Scott girl, past or present, were she
writing the lines, would substitute May and Decatur. In
May the delicate green of little leaves shows itself on the
trees and the warm air is redolent with blossoms of the
peach, the apple, and most fragrant of all, the honeysuckle.
Then it is that Agnes Scott, fully imbued with this spirit
of Maytime, answers to the call of the out-of-doors and
pays her annual tribute to the coming of spring.

While light, whimsical strains of music mingle with
the whispering breeze the Queen of May, surrounded by
her attendants, mounts her garlanded throne and gives
audience to two joyous messengers, who typify the thought of spring, the time when
beauty and joy are born anew for the happiness of men. They announce to the
woodland court that in honor of the day the story of the birth of the flower
Narcissus and of the Echo that dwells in the glens will be portrayed. Straightway
the fleeting Horae, whose task it is to usher in the rosy colored dawn dances grace-
fully for several moments in a wood sacred to Artemis, Goddess of the Chase.
As their pastel shades fade away the rollicking Satyrs peep timidly from their hiding
places in the dark foliage, and taking courage in the light of a new day, frolic
together. Shyly they disappear when they see the far-famed youth, Narcissus, with
her boyish companions entering the wood, to play at their favorite games.

Narcissus, though a lover of joy and life and all things beautiful, is yet satisfied
with himself, so he sends his comrades away that he may rest alone in content.
Now Echo, a lovely nymph dressed in palet green, and her playmates enter the
sacred wood. Echo is attracted by the lonely youth and becomes greatly desirous
that he join her in play. The ill-fated maiden cannot know that the proud and
handsome Narcissus is incapable of love. Soon his companions seek him, and he
gladly joins them, leaving Echo, saddened,
comforted only by the misty-blue Cloud Spirits,
who lead her from the wood.

Again the swift-footed Horae wake the
wood with the first glimpse of day, but as they
leave there are no queer little Satyrs to follow,
for all the world is unhappy over the sorrow of
Echo. The tall and slender green-clad Napaeae,
Nymphs of the valleys, enter in search of her;

yet they hide in sudden fright, for they hear
several Phocian huntsmen coming. The Pho-
cians, returning form their chase, have come
to the shrine of Artemis, that they may render
homage to their goddess. One of the Napaeae
approaches the leader of the huntsmen implor-
ing him to show a way whereby Echo may find
again her happiness. The huntsman explains
the use of the wonderful mirror in a near-by
pool of water. Joyously the Nymphs dance, awaiting the return of Echo. But
again the loving Echo meets with disappointment, for when Narcissus, on coming
into the wood, is shown the new-found toy, he forgets all else. No creature is more
beautiful than the one he sees in the water, who smiles with him and answers all his
moods. The despairing Echo appeals to Artemis, from whom she learns that Nar-
cissus cannot be forgiven, his presumption must be punished. Artemis sends her
stately maidens to announce her coming, and then entering she summons the little
Cloud Spirits, who bear Narcissus forever to their abode. Lovely flowers that bear
the name of Narcissus blossom where the youth had danced, but Echo, comforted
by them only for a short time, soon pined away until there was nothing left of her
but her voice.

Then the lingering sun casts its transient and slanting
rays on two little spirits, bringing a crown of flowers for
the Queen of May. Amid much laughter and applause she
is crowned. Again Agnes Scott has honored the coming
of spring, again a lovely festival has become a memory.

CAST.

Echo, an Oread RuTH Keiser

Narcissus, a Youth Lois McIntyre

Artemis, Goddess of the Chase . . Charlotte Keesler

Nymphs, Playmates, Cloud Spirits, Satyrs,
Horae, Flowers.

mag iag Olommttt?^

LuciLE Little

Alice Jones

Miss Wilburn

ublicity Chairman

Chairman

Coach

Sarah Till

Miss Wade

Caroline Farquhar

Stage Manager

Coach

Costume Chairman

^^ntor lag

Every college has its customs and everyone knows
that it is due to the delightful customs and traditions that
are handed on from one year to another that a large part
of the bigness and charm of college life is due. Such
things become more beautiful and a more vital part of our
world as time goes on.

And so it was that the Freshmen had not been here
long before they heard of Senior Day. But Senior Day
did not convey a great deal to the Freshmen's mind until
it was added "You know the day before investiture all the
Seniors dress like little girls." Probably there was no
more said about it for a time, but suddenly one morning
^ ^ ' during breakfast there was a scurrying of feet across the

coUonnade and a crowd of evergrown children skipped into the dining room. A
shout went up when they were found to be our Seniors such a transformation!
The most extravagantly tangled and netted coiffure fell in soft ringlets and bore an
enormous pink bow the most French heels were replaced by flat shoes, and the
most elegantly dressed Senior appeared in a little chequered apron. Hair that had
never drifted from the straight and narrow way was a mass of unruly literally bob-
bing curls, dresses were scandalously brief even for this day, and the worldly wise
Seniors looked as happy and undignified and unknowing as the rest of us. They
skipped about the faculty table singing "Good morning, dear teacher,'" and then
sang their attractive songs to the rest of us as they skipped about the tables. After
they had given vent to their joyousness they went to school like dutiful children and
dumbfounded the teachers by the wisdom that they of so tender years showed.
Agnes Scott looked like a veritable kindergarten with long, lanky, and fat, chubby
children, all however with wondrous curls and all well supplied with ribbon.

When school was over there was a "have your picture taken" movement afoot,
and even the most timid and modest of creatures draped herself gladly over the
sun dial and had the cruel camera stare her in the face. And so the Seniors have
a record of their last childhood frolic, and when
they are risen in the intellectual world can look
back to the time when the burden of knowledge
was lifted for a day.

To under-classmen Senior Day also brings
a thrill, for it gives them something to look
forward to the day before they are to take the
cap and gown and appear as full-fledged
Seniors.

JnufHtttur?

The first important service of the year that pertains to the Seniors alone and is next to grad-
uation in its impressiveness and dignity is Investiture, which makes the Senior feel that she has
really reached the highest point in her college career. It is a rising from the plane of mere stu-
dent to the height of gowned scholastic dignity the height toward which she has been climbing
sometimes wearily but always strenuously and hopefully ever since she appeared at Agnes Scott
an all-seeing Freshman.

The day before Investiture, just to make the change the more impressive, the Seniors cast
away every burdensome thought, and bedecked in as youthful a manner as possible, ran about
the campus just as if they were back in grammar school days. The day of Investiture gives
everyone that exhilarating feeling that something very big and very thrilling is going to take
place before the day is over. When all were assembled in chapel, excitement reached its
highest pitch, and finally to reward the eager expectation of those who, by reason of the solemn-
ity of the occasion, were merely casting furtive glances, and those who craned thein necks to-
ward the door, the gowned Seniors finally formed an aisle outside the chapel. The strains of
"Ancient of Days" brought over the students that feeling of awe, elation, and solemnity that
indescribable feeling which all such impressive occasions arouse in an aspiring underclassman.
The Sophomore Sisters dressed in white, though properly solemn, radiating pride and hap-
piness, formed an aisle through which the faculty led by Dr. Gaines, passed. Following the fac-
ulty came the Seniors, who with their gowns, caps in hand, and awe-inspiring collars, made their
less significant fellow students look forward with eagerness to one of the biggest events of her
college career when she would probably have attained such glory.

The service was opened with a prayer by Dr. Gaines, who afterward made a few appropriate
remarks as to the new dignity to which the class of '21 had come. Mr. Stukes had been chosen
to give the address of the occasion, and his talk on the true education symbolized by Investiture
was very inspiring and impressive. At the close of the address the Seniors knelt one by one
before Miss Hopkins while she placed each one's cap upon her head. When the service was
ended the whole assembly sang the Alma Mater and the procession marched out in the order
in which it had come.

The solemnity and sweetness of the Investiture of the class of '21 impressed us as never
before, and brought to everyone an inspiration that will last an inspiration to work more en-
thusiastically toward the day that brings the student to the height of dignity and gloriousness of
her college career.

AgtiPH i>rntt iEkrt^^ to M^mh^ral^tp in AsBoria-
Iton nf Amrnran llntwrsttt^B

^S'hen old Santa was looking over his Christmas list this year, you may be sure he winked
and smiled wisely when he came to Agnes Scott's name, for on Christmas Eve his gift arrived,
in the form of a certain letter to Dr. Gaines, from Secretary Robertson of the Association of Ameri-
can Universities, part of which is quoted: "It gives me pleasure to inform you that at the twenty-
second conference of the Association of American Universities, the Agnes Scott College was placed
on the list of colleges and universities approved by this Association." The letter then gave a list
of other colleges and universities approved at the 1920 meeting of the Association. It is inter-
esting to note that Agnes Scott is the only woman's college south of Lynchburg to be placed on
this list, and one of the only two Southern colleges for women to which this recognition has
been given. How we applauded when the joyful news was announced to us on our return from
the Christmas holidays, and what a new thrill of pride in our Alma Mater ran through us, as
we thought of her, standing in full equality with the oldest and greatest' of the universities of
Europe!

Recognition by and election to membership in this Association means a great deal to any
college, for it carries with it recognition not only by leading colleges and universities all over
this country, but also by the universities of Europe as well. The list was first made in 1913
at the request of various European universities, in order to ascertain which American institutions
should be credited on certificate rather than on examination. ./Vgnes Scott has already been
recognized by the leading educational institutions all over this country, but was barred from
the Association because of the small financial resources; but when this barrier was removed,
mainly by the recent activities of Dr. Gaines, Agnes Scott was placed on the approved list almost
immediately. It was one of the one hundred leading colleges listed by government experts in
1915, only twelve of which were colleges for women, and of those twelve only three were Southern
colleges. Agnes Scott has progressed with almost incredible rapidity from a grammar school, to
a preparatory school and finally to a college of the highest standing; it has progressed from rec-
ognition in the South alone, to the whole country, and finally to Europe. The college is indeed
fortunate in having for its president Dr. Gaines, who has labored unceasingly from its very found-
ing to raise its standards and ideals, and in every way to increase its facilities for becoming an
institution of the greatest usefulness, and has fitted it at last to receive the highest honor that
can be conferred upon any college or university membership in the Association of American
Universities.

(9 2>^

i>0nal ^prutr? at Agn^a i>rott

Many and varied have been the activities of the Social Service Department of
our Young Women's Christian Association this year. The work has become larger
and more inclusive of outside interests than ever before. Never in its history has
this department undertaken as many lines of activity and never has it had greater
enthusiasm and heartier co-operation from the girls as groups and as individuals.

Fundamentally organized to seek to serve others, the girls on the various com-
mittees have derived much pleasure and benefit for themselves, both in the work
itself and in learning to pull together in true fellowship.

The newest branch of service, perhaps, has been the Open Forum every week
for the purpose of promoting world citizenship. This has been accomplished through

thorough discussions of the many problems we will meet and the obligations we
must share when facing the world as citizens. We have profited greatly from the
inspiring addresses we have been privileged to hear from many lecturers of note.
Through them we have gained a more intimate knowledge of affairs outside of our
college life.

Another way in which we have kept more closely in touch with outside interests
has been the work we have carried on in connection with the Atlanta Young Women's
Christian Association. We have conducted Girl Reserve Clubs in Atlanta and have
had a great deal of pleasure in working and playing with girls of every sort and
description. The idea of training for Eight Weeks' Clubs has been carried out in the
last few years, but this plan of actually conducting clubs during the winter was
original with the department this year and has proved most promising for future
development.

Community Service spells a major part of Y. W. C. A. interests this year, for
in this work has been the actual contact with those outside our ordinary field of
vision. We have tried to see the needs of others less fortunate than ourselves, and
have endeavored to do whatever was in our power to bring a bit of cheer or happi-
ness into a dark corner. Though limited in some directions, the work has been
intensified in others, which was shown by the splendid way in which the girls co-
operated in planning a Christmas tree for the children at the Decatur Orphans' Home.
No pains were spared to make the afternoon a happy event in the lives of these
youngsters, and no girl in college who participated will say she didn't have as good
a time as the kiddies with whom she played that afternoon. The children at the
Home for the Friendless and at the Crippled Children's Home are also well acquainted
with many an Agnes Scott girl, who has gone out to spend the afternoon reading,
telling stories or playing with them. The people at the Poor House are also
acquainted with many of the girls who have visited there, and carried baskets of
goodies to them. Time limit has prevented some trips out there, so that energy and
interest had to be spent elsewhere during the winter months.

All these activities off the campus as well as the Maid's Sunday School here on
the campus have played a large part in not only our work but also our play, and
we feel that not those whom we have tried to serve, but we ourselves have profited
the most.

(92)

(Ll}^ ICwturF Aaaoriation

The Lecture Association began in the Faculty Parlor. Such a distinguished
place could not fail to give birth to an organization of wide-spread influence and
importance in the college life, and from the informal gathering in the unfamiliar
room, an association for the purpose of procuring outside speakers was formed. The
twelve members of the organization had soon elected its officers and made plans for
its open meeting in which the idea of our miniature Chautauqua should be presented
to the student body.

The meeting was a huge success and the business end was amply provided for.
Soon most of the girls on the campus were the proud possessors of lecture tickets
in pastel shades, and looking forward to the pleasure of at last attaining knowledge
in tabloid form.

The lecturers arrived. They were chaperoned and sponsored by various faculty
members, and wined and dined and generally sung to by the student body. Informal
receptions made it possible for every girl to meet the speaker personally and have a
cup of coffee in his honor, which added a great deal to the general appreciation of
the occasion.

Mr. William E. Dodd was the first to arrive. We were especially fortunate to
have him for a course of lectures, and his three appearances were well attended, not
only by the students, but by interested friends from Atlanta and Decatur. Mr. Dodd's
subject was "The Mission of Woodrow Wilson," and his loyalty and admiration for
the great Southerner found an instant response in the hearts of Agnes Scott. Several
members of the faculty had had courses under Mr. Dodd at Chicago University and
we found that their enthusiasm for him was thoroughly endorsed by all who heard him.

January the twenty-seventh brought Mr. Lorado Taft to Agnes Scott. Mr. Taft
is famous both as a lecturer and as a sculptor, and his talk on "Renaissance Art"
bore all the ear-marks of the work of a master. Mr. Taft is also connected with the
University of Chicago and is the celebrated sculptor of the new Fountain of Time,
situated on the campus of the institution.

Last but not least, we welcomed Miss Harriet Monroe, editor of "Poetry." Miss
Monroe's talk was charming as well as authentic, and the "lady lecturer" made
quite as great an impression as her two gentlemen predecessors.

The Lecture Association has just begun its work. However, with the continued
guidance of its faculty members, the organization is looking forward to making its
work a source of great benefit to Agnes Scott and the surrounding community.

]fa\xx\hnB ia^ iFpbntarij uiuipntij-Bfrnnii

The combination which results when the Father of our Country and the father
of our college happen to have a birthday upon the same date, is considered sufBcient
excuse to warrant a holiday. So in honor of George Washington and George Wash-
ington Scott the Senior class entertained the college community at dinner. The
dining rooms were brilliant with decorations, in the center of each table was a
diminutive cherry tree, and the red, white and blue streamers were festooned from
post to post.

The toast master of the occasion was George Washington, himself, and the
numerous other guests, including Lafayette, Patrick Henry, Daniel Boone, Thomas
Jefferson, and Betsy Ross, added much to the gaiety of the affair. The witty toasts
and the clever songs contributed their full share to the dinner's enjoyment.

Following the dinner, George and Martha Washington lead the way to the
gymnasium, where the minuet was given most charmingly by the Seniors. The
evening wound up with a dance and a grand march, and another Founder's Day
became ancient history.

fOASSop

1 WILL PRESENT

THE

POPULAR^

COAE EARLY I *
ALL GIRLS WHO DO
MOT WAhT TO GO
HOnE FOR Tf
H0UDAY5
SiGh UP WJ
n/5S HOPt^ .
BRING YOuK \ 19^

^PLEhDID OPPORTUniTY

for

,rRE5HnLI1^C0f1T(ilBUTE
CAMOPY HEEDED

oveR

SUn-DIAL

I t K^

(Q2]

Olclbg? Bxn^B

"For what's the

Use of learning forty-'leven lessons

When tomorrow brings still more?"
There may be lots of use in learning them sometimes, but there's not a speck of use in tiding
on Tuesday nights. That's one time when you can't get many of the forty-'leven lessons at Agnes
Scott, for if you're not singing yourself you hear such an enthusiastic melody in the chapel that
it makes every care you ever had leave you.

With such love for songs, we naturally greet everything and everybody who comes to Agnes
Scott in a singing humor. When the speakers come it's

"Oh me, oh my, we'll get there by and by,

If anybody loves the speakers.

It's I-I-I-I-I!"
There must be serenades to fit every kind of speaker that ever comes the tall ones, the
short ones, the jolly ones, the serious ones. How clever they must think we are to burst forth
in a song that just exactly suits their disposition. And when debates come 'round! There's
nothing like letting our debaters know that we're backing them up and how can they help know-
ing it when we sing with a vim that is dead sure to win? After all, though, it doesn't make so
much difference, as far as the singing goes, whether we win or lose there's one little song that
always fits in

"Howe'er it ends.

We'll hail our friends,

And never mind the score."
There are many other occasions that demand peppy college songs, but the time when we like
to sing best of all is on Tuesday nights right after the Student Government meeting. Then the
singing begins, not because we're cheering our college on to victory in a debate and not because
we're trying to show off before a conference or a speaker, but just because we love to sing.
"Whooper up" or "Hottentot" are fine things to start off with because they simply bring all the
pep you ever had to the surface.

But it's getting late now, so the Sing must close except we might have time for one popu-
lar song. After the good-natured swing of something catchy, we just have time to sing one of the
grand old sure 'nough college songs. Sometimes it's

"The hills of Georgia guard thee well
Agnes Scott, my Agnes Scott,"
but oftener it's the "Alma Mater." Oh, how we love it!

Publtrattona

The history of publications at Agnes Scott should be a history of the develoj)-
ment and growth of the college. For this reason it is frequently interesting to kiioiv
what people were concerned in collecting the material to be preserved through the
coming ages, and handed down to posterity. The following statistics have been
compiled in order that a compact record may be kept of those who have done work
along this line.

SILHOUETTE

EDITORS
'21 F. C. Markley
"20 Louise Slack
'19 M. RowE
"18 Lois Eve
"17 Spot PayzNe
'15 Eloise Gay
'14 Sarah Hansell
"13 Olivia Bocacki (Mrs. Ashby Hill I

Frances Dukes (Mrs. Paul Wynne)
'12 Ruth Slack (Mrs. Hazen Smith)
"11 Mary Wallace Kirk

Sadie Gober
"10 Mattie Hunter

Mildred Thompson
'09 EiTCENiA Fuller

Annette McDonald
'08 Elva Drake

Mary Dillard
'07 Elizabeth Curry

BUSINESS MANAGERS
"21 Theressa Newton
'20 Louise Johnson

'18 Ruby Lee Estes (Mrs. W. A. Ware)
'17 Laurie Caldwell
"16 Laura Cooper
"14 Beverly Anderson
"13 Helen Smith (Mrs. Taylor)

Emma Pope Moss (Mrs. C. W. Dieckmann)
'12 Carol Stearns (Mrs. Harold Wey)

Fannie G. Mayson (Mrs. D. B. Donaldson)
'11 Eleanor Pinkston (Mrs. Chas. Stokes)

Eleanor Coleman
'10 Eleanor Frierson

Eleanor Coleman
"09 Jean Powell

Mattie Hunter
"08 Lillian Phillips

LuTiE Powell
'07 Irene Foscue

'21 Nell Buchanan
'20 F. C. Markley
'19 Louise Slack
'18 M. Howe
'17 Lois Eve
'16 Spot Payne

AGONISTIC

"21 Sarah Till
'20 Louise Fluker
"19 Elizabeth Enloe
"18 Ethel Tye (?)
'17 Myra Scott
'16 Myra Scott

AURORA

'21 Rachel Rushton

'20 L. S. Malloy

"19 Dorothy Thicpen

'18 Olive Hardwick

'17 Claudia Hunt

'16 Louise Wilson (Mrs. Thomas Williams)

'14 Mary Helen Schneider (Mrs. Ben Head)

'13 Emma Jones

'12 Antoinette Blackburn

'11 Geraldine Hood

'10 Mildred Thompson

'09 Ruth Marion (Mrs. Louis Wisdom)

'08 Mary Dillard

"07 Sarah Boals

'21 Cama Burgess .

'20 Rhea King

'19 Louise Johnson

'18 F. Oliver

"17 Rose Harwood

"16 Elizabeth Willet

'14 Emma Jones

"13 Louise McNulty

"12 Emma Pope Moss

"11 Antoinette Blackburn

'10 Julia Pratt Smith (Mrs. Searcy Slack)

Antoinette Blackburn
'09 Adelaide Nelson
'08 Ruth Marion (Mrs. Louis Wisdom)
'07 Edith Sloan

Adelaide Nelson

rQ2)<;

o

iuc^ooe

(92

(QO

^

iPJm^'mid&p

^^\ah^i^(ao^

n. ALLE^^ -'21

Ij^ QlaUnhar

SEPTEMBER

Sept. 15. The welcoming aims are extended to receive an endless stream which
pours from the mouth of the tunnel.

Sept. 16. And still they come. The committee rooms cannot accommodate
the crowds. We stand outside on one foot waiting to be classified. New organdie
dresses adorn the campus at the Y. W. Tea.

Sept. 17. Classes begin. Mr. Tart most popular man on campus. Two hun-
dred Freshmen find that a trip to Decatur does not count as a time to town. Donning
hats, they seek out the lair of chocolate tans.

Sept. 18. Annual faculty reception. Many new dresses sported, many old
friends recognized. We are still wondering what has become of the psychology
department's green hat.

Sept. 20. We discover that Cupid has made havoc among the faculty during
vacation.

Sept. 22. Sophomore week begins. Marvelous transformation in architecture
of Freshmen coiffures. The colonnade resounds with skipping feet and the tinkling
of bells.

Sept. 30. Peace is restored around the placard bonfire.

OCTOBER.

Oct. 2. Victory is sweet to the harassed and long-suffering Freshmen. They
have worn bells all week; now one adorns the black cat.

Oct. 4. New addition to faculty causes sensation. Students drop other courses
to take up Math.

Oct. 5. Table manners stunt, "A Freshman's Nightmare," gives us power to
see ourselves as others see us.

Oct. 6. Agnes attends her first suffrage meeting.

Oct. 8. Hoasc members are announced: C. Bell, M. Bell, A. D. Glover, E.
Wilson. Freshmen learn that the gaining of knowledge alone is not the only end
in life.

Oct. 9. Blackfriars presents "As You Like It." Charlotte Bell goes to Cleve-
land as Undergraduate Field Representative.

Oct. 12. Students are roused out of sleep during the wee small hours to attend
the first fire drill.

Oct. 22. Trembling but aspiring would-be-actors furnish light amusement for
Blackfriars try-out committee.

Oct. 30. Witches and goblins send eerie shivers down our spinal cord at the
Senior Hallowe'en party.

NOVEMBER.

Nov. 1. Harding and Cox stir up strong party feeling by stump speeches in
the dining room. We sing goodbye to Margaret and Nell, who are leaving for the
student government convention at Elmira.

Nov. 2. We elect Cox and sit up till midnight waiting returns from Wash-
ington.

Nov. 6. Hoasc presents stunts representing college activities.

Nov. 7. Dr. McCain leads Y. W. C. A.

Nov. 11. Mr. Yamamoto, of Japan, gives an illustrated lecture on the land of
sunshine and flowers.

Nov. 13. We scramble down the gang plank of the Mayflower to attend the
Puritan party given by Freshmen in the gym.

Nov. 17. Miss McDougall requests students not to chew gum in lab.

Nov. 18. Silence is not golden when the Juniors give a mum party B. E. F.

Nov. 20. Sophomores give dance in gym. An escaped alligator causes panic
in Rebecca Scott.

Nov. 25. Thanksgiving day ! And only one month 'till Christmas.

Nov. 27. A dramatist buds in our midst. Blackfriars presents Rhea King's
"Green Moth" to a packed audience, also "Three Dear Friends."

DECEMBER.

Dec. 1. Rows of white paper dolls appear along the walls in the dormitories.

Dec. 2. The Decatur Alumnae present three plays in chapel and standing room
is at a premium. Clothes may make the man, but we're not so sure about wigs.

Dec. 3. Dr. Dodd gives series of lectures on Woodrow Wilson. Also we find
several underclassmen especially fond of faculty coffee.

Dec. 7. Mr. Lester makes "unique" talk on thrift to extravagant Agnes Scott.

Dec. 8. Propyleans bear off laurels in inter-society debate, and we begin to
wonder who will star in the inter-collegiate debates.

Dec. 11. Ninety little orphans are entertained by Santa and his assistants in
the gym. The children give Agnes Scott a lesson in table manners by firmly refusing
second helpings of ice cream and cake.

Dec. 12. Y. W. C. A. gives annual White Christmas service in chapel.

Dec. 17. Off for the holidays with the prospect of two whole weeks of pleasure.

JANUARY.

Jan. 3. Back at work. Cheer up, the worst is yet to come. Examinations, like
the poor, are always with us.

Jan. 10. Dr. Rosalie Morton tells of her work in Jugo-Slavia, also of the non-
appearance of the Serbian student.

Jan. 18. The agony begins.

Jan. 29. It ends for some of us!

FEBRUARY
Feb. 1. Annual goes to press and editor into hysterics.

(92

itr^rtorg of IFantltij

Alexander, Miss Lucile 52 Park Lane, Atlanta, Ga.

Armistead, Dr. J. D. M Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

Brown, Miss Agatha Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.

Curry, Miss Ethel 60 Orris St., Melrose Heights, Mass.

DiECKMAN. Mr. C. W Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

Dieckman, Mrs. C. W Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

FiNLAY, Miss Hattie M 1001 East 5th St., Chattanooga, Tenn.

FiTZHUGH, Mrs. Margaret Columbia University, New York City

Gaines, Dr. F. H Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

GoocH, Miss Frances K Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

Hammond, Miss Charlotte Koskuisko, Miss.

Hearon, Miss Cleg Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

Hopkins, Miss Nannette Hot Springs, Va.

Holt, Mr. Robert B Adams St., Decatur, Ga.

HowsoN, Miss Emily E 109 N. 34th St., Philadelphia, Pa.

Johnson, Mr. Lewis H Decatur, Ga.

Laney, Miss Emma May Tupelo, Miss.

Legate, Miss Helen 65 Imlay St., Hartford, Conn.

Lewis, Miss Louise Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

Longshore, Miss Alice Columbiana, Ala.

Martin, Miss Anne University of Chicago, Chicago, HI.

MacDougall, Miss Mary Stuart .... Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga.

McCain, Dr. James Ross 19 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

McKinney, Miss M. Louise 34 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Newton, Miss Janet Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.

Painter, Mr. Henry L Charlottesville, Va.

Rothermel, Miss Julia E 114 North 9th St., Reading, Pa.

Skeen, Miss Augusta Decatur, Ga.

Sledd, Miss Frances Decatur, Ga.

Smith, Miss Lillian S 630 University Ave., Syracuse, N. Y.

Stevenson. Miss Lillian 1001 Fifth Ave., Fort Worth, Tex.

StFkes, Mr. S. G Manning, S. C.

Sweet, Dr. Mary F 34 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Sydenstricker, Mrs. Alma S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

SuTPHEN, Miss Katherine Van Dusen . . . Dorloo, Schoharie County, N. Y.

Torrance, Miss Catherine Lexington, Hlinois

Wade, Miss Myra 1 615 N. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, HI.

WiLBURN, Miss Llewellyn Adams St., Decatur, Ga.

i>tu^?nl itr?rtnri|

Adams, Agnes Maude 506 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Adams, Louise 271 Oak St., Atlanta, Ga.

Agee, Caroline 1218 Woodstock Ave., Anniston, Ala.

Akers, Mabel 135 Simpson St., Atlanta, Ga.

Alexander, Joyce 138 College Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Alford, Attie America Bonifay, f la.

Allen, Clara Mae Gumming, Ga.

Allen, Dorothy Clark LaFayette, Ala.

Allen, Imogene Stephanie Gumming, Ga.

Allen, Minnie Stanley . LaFayette, Ala.

Almond, Ruth Elizabeth 469 Mcintosh St., Elberton, Ga.

Amis, Frances Anne Fordyce, Ark.

Arant, Frances 1403 Yale Station, New Haven, Conn.

Archer, Cornelia Montreal, N. C.

Archer, Jeanette Montreat, N. C.

Arnold, Emily Stanford Newnan, Ga.

Arnold. Mary Evylyn 428 E. Sixth St., Anniston, Ala.

Askew, Elizabeth Pinson 43 Druid Place, Atlanta, Ga.

Ballard, Martha Brewton, Ga.

Bardwell, Mary Shorter 1414 Juniper St., Atlanta, Ga.

Barton, Helen Thruston Sewanee, Tenn.

Barton, Mary Neill Sewanee, Tenn.

Bearden, Ida Madison, Ga.

Beason, Josephine Matilda Monroe, Ga.

Beck, Mrs. B. R 131 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Bell, Charlotte W R. F. D. No. 7, Shelbyville, Ky.

Bell, Margaret Lewisburg, W. Va.

Bernhardt, Ella Delight 211 Mulberry St., Lenoir, N. C.

Bieser, Alberta Elizabeth Box 178, Hamlet, N. C.

Bishop, Ruth Juliet 115 S. East Lake Drive, Decatur, Ga.

Bivings, Minnie Rebecca Jakin, Ga.

Blackmon, Myrtle Claire 2915 Hamilton Ave., Columbus, Ga.

Boone, Grace Virginia 25 Wesley St., Newnan, Ga.

Bordeaux, Hazel 1703 Summit Ave., Little Rock, Ark.

Boswell, Sara 328 W. College Ave., Decatur, Ga.

BowDOiN, Mary Bess Adairsville, Ga.

Bowron, Dorothy Louise 815 S. 30th St., Birmingham, Ala.

BoYD, Maud Hartford, Ala.

Bradshaw, Mary David 119 East Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Brandon, Sara Patterson 624 N. Union St., Natchez, Miss.

Brenner, Margaret Frieda 134 Barnett St., Atlanta, Ga.

Brewer, Augusta Helene 1912 12th Ave., S., Birmingham, Ala.

Broach, Ruth Howard Point Peter, Ga.

Brodnax, Sarah Belle 10 St. Augustine Place, Atlanta, Ga.

Brown, Ada Elizabeth 535 Vine St., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Brown, Alice McFadden Morton, Miss.

Brown, Elizabeth Anderson 318 Church St., Fort Valley, Ga.

Brown, Janice Stewart 403 N. Edgeworth St., Greensboro, N. C.

Brown, Louise Katherine 544 Church St., Decatur, Ga.

Brown, Ruth Mowbray 221 Prospect St., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Brown, Thelma 47 Columbia Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Bryan, Sarah Eugenia 203 E. 9th St., Rome, Ga.

Buchanan, Eleanor Fairman 9 Strother St., Marion, Va.

Burgess, Cama 2 East 16th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Burkhead, Annabel 10th St., Opelika, Ala.

Burt, Virginia Opelika, Ala.

Burum, Virginia Neville 2306 Walton Way, Augusta, Ga.

Byrd, Evelyn Meyrick 2800 12th St., Miami, Fla.

Caldwell, Mary White Graham, N. C.

Callahan, Lola Mae Crawfordville, Ga.

Callaway, Gena Monte Sano Ave., Augusta, Ga.

Callaway, Mamie Carolyn Snowdoun, Ala.

Campbell, Nannie Carrington 503 N. Addison St., Richmond, Va.

Cannon, Augusta 500 East Boulevard, Charlotte, N. C.

Cannon, Gwynne Jonesboro, Ga.

Carnes, Maybeth McDowell 232 Waverly Way, Atlanta, Ga.

Carpenter, Eleanor Blake 1310 6th St., Louisville, Ky.

Carr, Alice Gray 104 Shotwell St., Bainbridge, Ga.

Carr, Isabel 506 Clinton St., Harriman, Tenn.

Carter, Minnie Merle 179 Myrtle St., Atlanta, Ga.

Cartland, Cornelia 1103 W. Elm St., Greensboro, N. C.

Cawthon, Marion McCaskill De Funiak Springs, Fla.

Chandler, Venus Estelle 56 E. 17th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Christie, Helen Aline 212 W. College Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Clarke, Edyth Bland 133 Ashland Ave., Asheville, N. C.

Clarke, Minnie Lee 122 Jackson St., Augusta, Ga.

Colley, Mary Wood Centreville, Tenn.

CoLviLLE, Margaret Vance McMinnville, Tenn.

Comfort, Helen Lane Kosciusko, Miss.

Compton, Lois Hortense 786 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

CoNNETT, Cora 730 S. 14th St., St. Joseph, Mo.

Cook, Thelma 13 Avenue East, Cordele, Ga.

Cooper, Jessie Dean Centreville, Ala.

y^.^-

Cousins, Marguerite Louise 501 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Covington, Caroline Crawford Rockingham, N. C.

Craig, Catheryne Ripley, Tenn.

Craig, Ruth 1313 13th Ave., Hickory, N. C.

Crocker, Helen Harris 404 S. College St., Franklin, Ky.

Crossland, Louise Evans Rockingham, N. C.

Cunningham, Margaret 33 Colquitt Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Dabney, Elisabeth 514 E. 7th St., Hopkinsville, Ky.

Davidson, Beulah Lynnette R. F. D. No. 1, Fort Valley, Ga.

Davis, Edythe Miriam 34 E. 10th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Davis, Romola Senoia, Ga.

Daye, Nelle Frances 201 Madison St., Huntsville, Ala.

Dean, Eunice 133 Prevost St., Anderson, S. C.

Denney, Kathleen Doris Park Ave., Milan, Tenn.

Denney, Mary Martha Park Ave., Milan, Tenn.

Dennington, Catherine 610 Washington St., Atlanta, Ga.

De Zouche, Ruth 509 Third Ave., Ottawa, 111.

DoBBS, Marguerite Elizabeth Woodstock, Ga.

Dodd, Lucile Eileen Covington Road, Decatur, Ga.

DoLViN, Mary Key Siloam, Ga.

Dowdy, Annie Belle 12 Bowdon St., Commerce, Ga.

Downing, Frances 78 Park St., Atlanta, Ga.

Duke, Nell Davis Heflin, Ala.

Eakes, Martha Nancy 204 Church St., Decatur, Ga.

Elyea, Dorothy Peachtree Road, Atlanta, Ga.

Enloe, Elizabeth 338 St. Charles Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Epes. Elizabeth Poindexter Blackstone, Va.

Esslinger. Nell Randolph St., Huntsville, Ala.

Evans, Christine College and Miller Sts., Fort Valley, Ga.

Evans, Eunice Prevost 414 N. McDuffie St., Anderson, S. C.

Evans, Nancy Chenault West Main St., Richmond, Ky.

Evans, Ruth Miller St., Fort Valley, Ga.

Fambrough, Gertrude 61 E. Cain St., Atlanta, Ga.

Farmer, Annie Earle 815 W. Whitner St., Anderson, S. C.

Farquhar, Margaret Caroline 3 S. 11th St., Easton, Pa.

Faw, Helen Atkins 404 Roswell St., Marietta, Ga.

Fender, Frances Young 901 N. Patterson St., Valdosta, Ga.

Ficklen, Emmie Bounds Main St., Washington, Ga.

Finney, Mary Robb 312 Ponce de Leon Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Flake, Elizabeth Ansley Main St., Conyers, Ga.

Floding, Elizabeth Parkinson 250 Myrtle St., Atlanta, Ga.

^?

Floding, Mary Edna 250 Myrtle St., Atlanta, Ga.

Flowers, Sarah Elizabeth 35 Severn Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Fluker, Sarah Louise Thomson, Ga.

Foster, Maud 175 Gordon St., Atlanta, Ga.

French, Ellen Lydia , Cascade, Va.

Fulton, Sarah Hamilton 205 S. Oak St., Decatur, Ga.

Gambrill, Anne Jane 652 W. Market St., Anderson, S. C.

Gardner, Josephine 205 George St., Greenwod, Miss.

Gardner, Lelia Frances 203 Fairview Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Gilbert, Otto R. F. D. No. 7, Atlanta, Ga.

Gilchrist, Katie Frank Courtland, Ala.

Gilchrist, Philippa Garth , Courtland, Ala.

Gtlliland, Mary Frances 334 Gorrell St., Greensboro, N. C.

Girardeau, Ivylyn Bethel St., Thomaston, Ga.

Glover, Aimee D 503 Whitlock Ave., Marietta, Ga.

Goodrich, Mary 481 Spring St., Atlanta, Ga.

Goodroe, Geraldine Barbour St., Eufaula, Ala.

Gordon, Eleanor Moreman Fort Defiance, Va.

Gordon, Selma L 204 E. Georgia Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Greene, Mary Hemphill .38 Greenville St., Abbeville, S. C.

Green, Mary Louise 1015 Sixth St., Corinth, Miss.

Griffin, Margaret 412 Troup St., Valdosta, Ga.

Grimes, Annie Brooks 31 S. Main St., Statesboro, Ga.

GuERRY, Mary Augusta Montezuma, Ga.

Guille, Emily Egerton Ingleside, Athens, Tenn.

Hall, Helen 325 S. Candler St., Decatur, Ga.

Hall, Jennye Alice 112 Peachtree Place, Atlanta, Ga.

Hall, Ruth '. . . . 404 Front St., Laurel, Miss.

Ham, Mildred . 36 E. Boulevard Drive, Kirkwood, Ga.

Hamner, Pearl Lowe Buena Vista, Ga.

Hanes, Mariwil Jonesboro, Ga.

Hannah, Evelyn Ila Oakhurst Drive, Thomaston, Ga.

Harper, Frances 122 W. LIpsal St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.

Harrell, Kate Porter Moultrie, Ga.

Harrington, Alice Weddell Stone Ave., Monroe, La.

Harrold, Quenelle 301 College St., Americus, Ga.

Harris, Lulie Speer College Park, Ga.

Harris, Margaret Catherine Russellville, Ala.

Harris, Mary E Cedar Street, Franklin, Ky.

Harrison, Miriam 221 W. Hall St., Thomson, Ga.

Harrison, Sarah Rebecca 483 E. College St., Murfreesboro, Tenn.

Hart, Anne 761 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.

J C ' i C^

Harvard, Ethel Ruth Jakin, Ga.

Harwell, Anna Lowe Lovejoy 525 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Harwell, Frances Grace 211 Euclid Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Hatton, Annie E Broadway, Clinton, S. C.

Haugh, Catherine Wilkins 626 Piedmont Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Havis, Dorothy 273 Juniper St.. Atlanta, Ga.

Havis, Mary Josephine 273 Juniper St., Atlanta, Ga.

Hay, Margaret Vance 15th and Northampton Sts., Easton, Pa.

Hedgepeth, Ruth Evangeline Brownsville St., Ripley, Tenn.

Hedrick, Margaret 420 Sixth St., Bristol, Tenn.

Hendrix, Marion Louise Ball Ground, Ga.

Henry, Elizabeth 2627 Helen St., The Hill, Augusta, Ga.

Henry, Margaret Velma 1504 16th Ave., N., Birmingham, Ala.

Herm.\nn, Sarah Emma Main St., Dawson, Ga.

Hertzler, Anne 106 Juniper St., Atlanta, Ga.

Hewlett, Mary Stewart S. Main St., Conyers, Ga.

Hill, Margaret Virginia 184 W. North Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Hill, Martha Virginlv 501 W. 10th St., West Point, Ga.

Hobgood, Mary Angie Fairburn, Ga.

Hoke, Elizabeth Johnston Lincolnton, N. C.

HoLLis, Viola Madison, Ga.

Houston, Elizabeth 517 E. Lafayette St., Decatur, Ala.

Howard, Lucie 1101 Federal St., Lynchburg, Va.

Howie, Victoria 18 Finckney St., Abbeville, S. C.

Hull, Marion Lumpkin 35 Peachtree Circle, Atlanta, Ga.

Hunter, Sarah Louise Highland Park Sta., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Hutter, Emily C 1517 Jackson St., Lynchburg, Va.

Hyatt, Eliza Barron Norton, Va.

Hyde, Eleanor 1512 N. Carroll Ave., Dallas, Texas

IvEY, Lilburne Evergreen, Ala.

Jackson, Agnes 131 Boiling Ave., Monticello, Ark.

Jackson, Corinne 131 Boiling Ave., Monticello, Ark.

Jameson, Julia Jones West End Ave., Franklin, Tenn.

Jennings, Mattie May 158 S. Converse St., Spartanburg, S. C.

Johnson, Lollie Isabelle 805 Lee St., Thomson, Ga.

Johnson, Marion 904 E. North Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Johnston, Eugenia 795 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.

Jones, Alice Lake 310 Barrs St., Jacksonville, Fla.

Jones, Frances 115 Buckingham Place, Macon, Ga.

Justice, Mary Anne 284 Luckie St., Atlanta, Ga.

M

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Keesler, Charlotte Washington St., Greenwood, Miss.

Keiser, Ruth Love 2170 Highland Ave., Birmingham, Ala.

Kelly, Juanita 1121 15th St., Augusta. Ga.

Kelly, Mary Lena Jeff, Ala.

Kerns, Edith L 313 Ohio Ave., Charleston, W. Va.

KiNCANNON, Mary George Normal, Tenn.

King, Mary Evelyn Tazewell Ave., Cape Charles, Va.

King, Rhea 603 W. Hill St., Knoxville, Tenn.

KiRBY, Lillian Tracy 177 Myrtle St., Atlanta, Ga.

Knight, Jane M 548 Sherman St., Albany, Ala.

Knight, Katherine Eloise Safety Harbor, Fla.

Knight, Mary Lamar 558 N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.

Ladd, Margaret Third St., Cheraw, S. C.

Laing, Martha Spence Lewisburg, W. Va.

Lamar, Hazel 1168 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.

Landress, Anna Marie 913 East 9th St., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Landress, Ella Louise 913 East 9th St., Chattanooga, Tenn.

Landrum, Jeanette Mayfield, Ky.

Lane, Betty Sue 407 Shotwell St., Bainbridge, Ga.

Laughon, Ruth Elizabeth Pulaski, Va.

Leak, Concord Concord, N. C.

Lewis, Anna 53 Adair St., Atlanta, Ga.

LiNDSEY, Marguerite Carolyn 75 Elmira Place, Atlanta, Ga.

Lindsay, Marion Bernice 922 Vedada St., Miami, Fla.

Little, Anne Lucile 158 Myrtle St., Atlanta, Ga.

Little, Vivian 211 Berne St., Atlanta, Ga.

Lockhart, Elizabeth Wardlaw 220 Church St., Decatur, Ga.

Logan, Josephine Bell 64 Shirakabe Cho, 4 Chome, Nagoys, Japan

Long, Rosalie Leesburg, Ga.

Love, Katherine Roberta Lincolnton, N. C.

Lovett, Evelyn 35 E. Fourth St., Atlanta, Ga.

Lowe. Marjorie Glover R. F. D. No. 6, Macon, Ga.

LuTEN, Dorothy May Waverly, Tenn.

Lynn, Nina Burton 328 Ponce de Leon Place, Decatur, Ga.

Malone, Susan Margaret River Front, Greenwood. Miss.

Mann, Mary Lynder 46 Jackson St., Newnan, Ga.

Markley, Frances Charlotte Pearl and Manor Sts., Lancaster, Pa.

Marsh, Elizabeth 36 Crew St., Atlanta, Ga.

Martin, Margueritte Clayton, Ala.

Matthews, Sara Thompson Thomaston, Ga.

Maxwell, Annie Byrd White Haven, Tenn.

Meade, Anna Hardeman 2014 13th Ave., Birmingham, Ala.

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>

Melton, Edith Lee 124 Kings Highway, Decatur, Ga.

Melton, Evelyn Leo 124 Kings Highway, Decatur, Ga.

Merrin, Virginia 508 W. Reynolds St., Plant City, Fla.

MiDDLEBROOKS, Mary Lillian Starrsville, Ga.

MiLBURN, Marguerite 85 Drewry St., Atlanta, Ga.

Miller, Annie Wille 167 Lake Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

MiLLiKiN, Grace 520 Washington St., Atlanta, Ga.

Mills, Exa Atlanta, Ga.

MiMS, SuSYE Margaret Monroeville, Ala.

MoBBERLY, Mary Lexington, Miss.

MoLLOY, Elizabeth Washington R. F. D. No. 1, Murfreesboro, Tenn.

Moody, Caroline Helena 519 W. Howard Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Moore, Carolyn Dean 619 Randolph St., Eufaula, Ala.

Moore, Eliza 122 Chesterfield Ave., Lancaster, S. C.

Moore, Ouida Trenton, Tenn.

MoRiARTY, Lois Ripley, Tenn.

Morton, Cora Frazer R. F. D. No. 1, Athens. Ga.

Morton, Sidney' 17.30 Dartsmouth Ave., Bessemer, Ala.

Morton, Susie Reid 2900 Cypress Ave., Birmingham, Ala.

Mosier, Mary Hill East Exchange St., Union City, Tenn.

MuRCHisoN, Lewis Landrum 1600 Blanding St., Columbia, S. C.

MuRCHisoN, Lucia 1600 Blanding St., Columbia, S. C.

Murphy, Myrtle . Broad St., Louisville, Ga.

Murphy, Vienna Mae Broad St., Louisville, Ga.

MuRPHEY, Pauline North Greenville St.. Newnan, Ga.

Myers, Frances C 112 Yamamoto dori. 4 Chome, Kobe, Japan

McAlister. Jean Colvin Irving Park, Greensboro, N. C.

McAlpine, Lilian May Nagoya, Japan

McCaa, Fanny 1025 Fairmont, Anniston, Ala.

McCallie, Edith 265 E. 4th St., Atlanta, Ga.

McCarrick, Elizabeth Catherine 85 E. Fair St., Atlanta, Ga.

McCaskill, Coma 208 Maiden Lane. Fayetteville, N. C.

McClain, Lois Jasper, Ga.

McClure, Elizabeth Lyle 516 N. 4th St., Wilmington, N. C.

McCoLGAN, Margaret Electra Norton, Va.

McCoNNELL, Hilda Royston, Ga.

McCullough, Julia Lowe 220 Ponce de Leon Ave.. Atlanta, Ga.

McCuRDY, Mary Stone Mountain. Ga.

McCuRDY, Sarah Carter Stone Mountain, Ga.

McDonald, Katherine Hand Ave., Pelham, Ga.

McDouGALL, Anna Hall 119 Fifth Ave., Franklin, Tenn.

McDow, Margaret Clarkson Kings Mountain St., York, S. C.

McDowell, Sara Day 531 W. Taylor St., Griffin, Ga.

\^ V> ' '

McFall, Mildred Laurence 4631 Worth St., Dallas, Texas

McIntosh, Martha 417 Tift St., Albany, Ga.

McKiNNEY, Mary Catherine Ripley, Tenn.

McLaughlin, Margaret Price Raphine, Va.

McLean, Ellen River Front, Greenwood, Miss.

McLean, Margaret Irene Winona, Miss.

McLellan, Mary Dalton, Ga.

McLeod, Mary Stewart 73 Central Ave., Bartow, Fla.

McMuRRAY, Charlotte Boyd Woodstock, Va.

McMurry, Edna Arnetta Hartwell Road, Lavonia, Ga.

Nash, Catherine Emery East Lake, Decatur, Ga.

Neal, Katherine Margaret 127 Jefferson Place, Decatur, Ga.

Newton, Charlotte 892 Prince Ave., Athens, Ga.

Newton, Theressa E Madison, Ga.

Nichols, Elizabeth 215 S. 8th St., Griffin, Ga.

NicKLES, Mary 15 Vienna St., Abbeville, S. C.

Ogletree, Fredeva Stokes Cornelia, Ga.

Oliver, Frances Aughtry Plains, Ga.

Oliver, Laura Aldworth R. F. D. No. 5, Montgomery, Ala.

Oliver, Lucy Gilmer R. F. D. No. 5, Montgomery, Ala.

Ordway, Virginia Moore 1113 Christine Ave., Anniston, Ala.

Pappenheimer, Louise 55 W. 11th St., Atlanta, Ga.

Parham, Elizabeth BuUochville, Ga.

Parker, Eleanor 401 N. Jackson St., Tullahoma, Tenn.

Parker, Margaret Emogene 12 Avery Drive, Atlanta, Ga.

Parks, Elizabeth Gertrude 27 Temple Ave., Newnan, Ga.

Park, Emily Isabelle 413 Broad St., LaGrange, Ga.

Parry, Lina Conn 115 E. 3rd St., Atlanta, Ga.

Passmore, Clyde 514 N. Jackson St., Albany, Ga.

Peck, Emily 710 S. Lawrence St., Montgomery, Ala.

Peck, Winona 710 S. Lawrence St., Montgomery, Ala.

Perry, Elizabeth Bowden Russellville, Ky.

Pharr, Montine 631 Clairmont Ave., Decatur, Ga.

Phillips, Martha Belle Church St., Monroe, Ga.

Pirkle, Ruth Janette Gumming, Ga.

Polhill, Lois 828 9th St., Louisville, Ga.

Porter, Marguerite Priscilla Washington, Ga.

Posey, Ida Valeria Central, S. C.

Pottle, Virginia Albany, Ga.

Pou, Eugenia Redd 11 15th St., Columbus, Ga.

Powell, Ella Joe 135 E. North Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

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Powell, Margaret 1514 Summit St.. Little Rock, Ark.

Preas, Nanabeth Roan Hill, Johnson City, Tenn.

Preston, Janef 411 Spencer St., Bristol, Va.

Proctor, Emma 211 S. Main St., College Park, Ga.

Ransom, Margaret Story 54 N. Howard St., Kirkwood, Ga.

Ransom, Sarah Elizabeth 400 Lucy Ave., Birmingham, Ala.

Rhyne, Lucy Merle 280 Hardee St., Atlanta, Ga.

Rice, Birdie 61 Sayre St., Montgomery, Ala.

Richardson, Cora Leonora 205 Dooly St., Hawkinsville, Ga.

Robinson, Emma Sue Prattville, Ala.

Robinson, Helen Marcelle Covington, Ga.

Robinson, Rosalie 115 Adams St., Decatur, Ga.

RoDGERS, Madre Page 18 Hardy Ave., Berkley, Norfolk, Va.

Ruff, Edith Ray 119 S. Whiteford Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

RusHTON, Rachel 739 S. Court St., Montgomery, Ala.

Russell, Eula Nichols Carter's Creek, Tenn.

Ryan, Blanche Marie 312-A Lee St., Atlanta, Ga.

Ryan, Mildred T 312-A Lee St., Atlanta, Ga.

Samuels, Gertrude 548 Jackson St., Thomson, Ga.

Sanders, Ruth S De Vall's Bluff, Ark.

Saunders, Julie Adams 408 N. Patterson St., Valdosta, Ga.

Saunders, Rebecca Greenwood, S. C.

Saunders, Sophie Alcorn Danville Ave., Stanford, Ky.

Saxon, Emma Gary 227 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

ScANDRETT, Carrie George 202 12th Ave., Cordele, Ga.

Scandrett, Ruth 202 12th Ave., Cordele, Ga.

Scott, Dorothy Tazewell, Va.

Scott, Harriet Coleman Tazewell, Va.

Seagle, Alma Newland 103 Hibritan St., Lenoir, N. C.

Sellers, Merle Samson, Ala.

Sentelle, Claudia Lydia Bunkie, La.

Sewell, Mary Isabelle 66 N. Whiteford Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Shields, Catherine . Fulton Ave., Hapeville, Ga.

SiNGLETARY, Jennelle FRANCES McEwEN . . . 213 N. McDonough St., Decatur, Ga.

Smith, Charlotte Annette 30 McLendon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Smith, Daisy Frances 161 N. Whiteford Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Smith, Evelyn Clair Wesley Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Smith, Lucile Pauline Hillsdale, Baltimore, Md.

Smith, Margaret 408 W. Market St., Athens, Ala.

Smith, Mary Melissa Wauchula, Florida

Smith, Pearl McWilliams Second Ave., Rome, Ga.

Smith, Susan Elizabeth 515 Highland Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

/ / . i^\ .'^. / ^ ^ T T f^

i92)j

Spence, Clotile Wilkinson 107 Greenville, Newnan, Ga.

Spence, Ruth Wilkinson 107 Greenville St., Newnan, Ga.

Spruell, Gladys Thelma 205 Adams St., Decatur, Ga.

Stansell, Sarah Jane 801 Duncan Ave., Chattanoga, Tenn.

Stansfield, Martha 405 E. Manatee Ave., Bradentown, Fla.

Stanton, Lilla Mae Social Circle, Ga.

Stephens, Althea 1714 Liberty St., Jacksonville, Fla.

Stephens, Louie Dean Woodstock, Ga.

Stephenson, Hester 502 W. Broadway, Anadarko, Okla.

Stewart, Mary Emily Prattville, Ala.

Stinson, Annie Peyton 410 N. 8th St., Columbus, Miss.

Stokes, Frances 787 Ponce de Leon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

5tone, Polly 44 Washita Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Strickland, Annie Mae Stilson, Ga.

Stroud, Elizabeth Greenwood, Miss.

Strouss, Mariann Wallis 21 W. Alexander St., Atlanta, Ga.

Stuart, Frances 1013 N. Central Ave., Knoxville, Tenn.

Stubbs, Laurie Belle Eastman, Ga.

Swaney, Elma Roberta 401 High St., Chattanooga, Tenn.

SwANN, Fannie Wedowee, Ala.

Taliaferro, Martha Lee Evergreen, Ala.

Thomas, Emma Julia Prattville, Ala.

Thomas, Mary Augusta Prattville, Ala.

Thorincton, Margaret 1510 S. Hull St., Montgomery, Ala.

Till, Sarah Knapp Fayette, Miss.

TiMMERMAN, LucY 9 Oakland Ave., Sumter, S. C.

Travis, Allie Louise 502 Floyd St., Covington, Ga.

Tripp, Nancy King 35 Stokes Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Trump, Esther Joy 401 E. 5th St., Tuscumbia, Ala.

Turner, Frances Gilder 82 McLendon Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Turner, Margaret 304 Hand Avenue, Pelham, Ga.

Turner, Martha Jane 711 S. Main St., Fitzgerald, Ga.

Turner, Sarah Elizabeth Jonesboro, Ga.

Twitty, Amy C Pelham, Ga.

Vinnedge, Reba Blanche 5508 Hyde Park Blvd., Chicago, 111.

Virden, Alice Mayes Cynthia, Miss.

Virden, Ruth Elizabeth Cynthia, Miss.

Wade, Margaret Stuart Raphine, Va.

Waldrop, Clara Louise Jonesboro, Ga.

Walker, Dorothy Beatrice 435 N. Jackson St., Atlanta, Ga.

Waller, Frances 7th St., Mayfield, Ky.

r

Warden, Marjory Nell 1271 Willow Ave., Louisville, Ky.

Ware, Ethel Kime 131 W. Howard St., Decatur, Ga.

Warlick, Eugenia 90 East North Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Wassum, Eva Elizabeth 26th and 10th Sts., Birmingham, Ala.

Waterfield, Catherine Edith Place, Memphis, Tenn.

Watkins, Julia 739 Pujo St., Lake Charles, La.

Watkins, Marguerite H 1423 N. State St., Jackson, Miss.

Watts, Jessie Colt 129 Adams St., Decatur, Ga.

Wayt, Helen Peachtree Road, Atlanta, Ga.

Wharton, Mary 1008 Main St., Greenwood, S. C.

Wheeler, Pauline 14th Ave., Cordele, Ga.

Whipple, Alice 19th Avenue, Cordele, Ga.

Whitaker, Rosemary Stevens Mcintosh St., Elberton, Ga.

White, Frances 1125 Highland Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Whitfield, Frances 320 Merritt St., Hawkinsville, Ga.

Whyte, Eleanor Huntington St., Kosciusko, Miss.

WiLKiNS, Rosa 420 Academy St., Kingstree, S. C.

Wilkinson, Catherine College St., Dawson, Ga.

Williams, Faustelle Cordele, Ga.

Wilson, Ellen Garnett Washington St., Lexington, Va.

Wilson, Elvie Ripley, Tenn.

Wilson, Margaret Elizabeth 18 Dixie Avenue, Atlanta, Ga.

WoMELSDORF, Margaretta 103 Howard Heights, Cartersville, Ga.

Woolley, Frances Heard 139 Techwood Drive, Atlanta, Ga.

WooTEN, Lucy 207 Davis St., Covington, Ga.

Wright, Helen Vinnedge 106 38th St., W., Savannah, Ga.

Wright, Mary Ben 17 Haralson Ave., Atlanta, Ga.

Yeager, Margaret Netherland Highland Avenue, Memphis, Tenn.

Young, Frances Barnett Columbus, Ga.

(92

THE FRESHMAN'S LAMENT.
I never saw a molecule,
I never hope to see one,
But I can tell you, anyhow,
Just how it feels to be one.

Fan "Say, Frances, would you lend me your black middy tie this morning?"
F. Stuart "Why sure, but why the formality of asking for it?"
Fan "I couldn't find it."

C. McMurray to C. Keesler, who had just made some brilliant remarks, "Oh,

that ought to go in the Angora."

P. Stone "Mrs. Sydenstricker, did the prodigal son return home on a muddy,
rainy day?"

Mrs. S. "Why?"

P. S. "Well, it must have been slippery, for the Bible says that his father fell
on his neck."

SEPTEMBER 19, 1920.
E. Byrd "Is that the moon rising over there?"
S. Gordon "Fm sure I don't know, Fm a Freshman here myself."

TO ANNE.
Lives of Seniors all remind us,

We can make our lives sublime.
By asking foolish questions,

To take up all the teacher's time.

Lewis "What'll we do?"

Mary Mann "I'll spin a coin. If it's heads we go to the movies, if it's tails we
go to Riley's, and if it stands on edge we'll study.

R. Rushton, naively "Women always contradict one another.'
S. Till, heatedly "They do not."

IN ENGLISH XL

Miss McKinney "What is an epithet?"

C. Moore It's an inscription on a tombstone."

Miss Dougherty, as J. Archer limps into infirmary, "Have an accident?"
J. A. "No, thanks, just had one."

Ubere are you going, njij pretty rrjaid ?
Tit? goir)g ^\]oppir)as\}r/'6\)esa\io
\Alr)ere do you l/uy ^lo^s.ry prel\ij rpA'i
FrorT) oar a(l\/6rllser5,o|: course'slje saida

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AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE

DECATUR, GEORGIA
A College for Women

F. H. GAINES, President

Like Agnes Scott, this Institution serves the whole of
Dixie, and welcomes everyone to test this service.

CENTRAL BANK & TRUST CORPORATION

Mitchell St. Branch
Mitchell and Forsyth Sts.

Candler Building I t lU Ct d u

* lenth St. Branch

ATLANTA Tenth and Peachtree Sts.

HOME OF MR. 4%

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At

AGNES SCOTT

Who Furnishes the

Olives, Crackers, Cakes,
Sardines, Canned Meats,
Canned Fruits and Bottled Drinks

For your ''Feasts'*

ROGERS'

136 ECONOMY STORES

<<S>>->^><*x$>^>><^^*><?^xJ-^xJ><^*<S?>^^

Your Daughter

IS HOME

After a school year of honest ef-
fort and hard work. Make the
home happy for her with the
sweet music of the

Columbia Grafonola

We shall be glad to demonstrate
any model m your home

Haverty Furniture Co.

Ansley - Doster Company

WATERMAN FOUNTAIN PENS
EASTMAN KODAKS

Decatur's Leading Druggist
Phone Dec. 203 Decatur, Ga. ^

Ivy 2906

Atlanta, Ga.

Randolph Beauty Parlors

581/2 Whitehall

Marcel Waving
a Specialty

jx^^$>^>^^xJJxJ>^xJ^^xjKj>^^xJ^>^><^^xJxJxS^M^xs>^^^ i<S^xJ^xJx$xJ>^<S^x$>^^M;^>^>^^^x$>^x$xJ-

A Girl, Especially, Starting Out in Life, Should
Know The Value of Busy Dollars

You know there are several kinds ol Dollars. Dollars thai are good lor you. Dollars thai are bad lor you and
negligible Dollars ol little, il any. value.

Idle Dollars amount lo little or nothing. They loal their way into and out ol your lilc accomplishing nothing lor you
until ihey become ill spent Dollars which art thrown away lor a Irille that really adds nothing to the sum total ol your lile.

It is the busy Dollars that count, the Dollars in our Money Mill, working away lor you day alter day. earning other
dollars in interest.

Busy Dollars add to your pleasure in lile. They make it possible lor you to develop your talents lully. because busy
Dollars relieve you ol the necessity ol working solely lor money. Put a Dollar to work today.

The Money Mill Is Our Savings Department
Open Daily Until 4:00 P. M.

THE LOWRY NATIONAL BANK

EstablUhed 1861

Resources Over
Twenty-One Millions

Capital-Surplus-Profits
Two and One-Half Millions

King Hardware Co.

Cutlery, Silverware

Cut Glass, Chafing Dishes

Aluminum Ware

Enamel Ware

Stoves, Ranges, Refrigerators,

General Hardware, Sporting

Goods

Everything in Hardware

53 Peachtree St. 87 Whitehall St.

ATLANTA, GA.

^^kSxJ^S^>.$x$k$^J^x$>^xS)^x$kSxS>^xJ.^.^^xSxJ^xJk?^^>^^

Atlantic Ice & Coal
Corporation

Washington Street Viaduct

Atlanta

-CSC)

Phone, Bell Main 1900

Ice, Coal

and

Cold Storage

You Will Be Pleased

With The Good Eats and Pleasant Surroundings
at

THE BRITLING CAFETERIA

(The Home of Southern Home Cooking)
90 North Pryor Street Atlanta, Georgia

Miss Virginia Bowie Miss John R. Bowie

Virginia & John Bowie

IMPORTERS
Dress-Fabrics, Trimmings, Laces and Robes

607-612 Grand Opera House
Telephone Ivy 3875 Atlanta, Georgia

XAYIi^ADv See our representative and have your

* il/lVni/tJ baggage checked direct from College

BAGGAGE TRANSFER ^o your home

We call for and deliver your baggage either to some
part of city or any station. We check from your resi-
dence to destination. Call Us.

All Phones Main 4000

ATLANTA BAGGAGE & CAB CO.

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On the Best Portraits

You Will Find OUR Name

McCRARY & CO.

381/2 Whitehall Street

ATLANTA

Photographers

Phone Main 5377

MARRIAGE INVITATIONS

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Monogram Stationery Visiting Cards

ENGRAVED IN CORRECT STYLES

Send for Samples and Prices

J. P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO.

47 Whitehall Street Peachtree St., Opposite Piedmont Hotel

ATLANTA, GA.

Wear

RED SEAL SHOES

(Made in Atlanta)

We will appreciate your
asking for them your
feet will appreciate the
result.

Manufactured by

J. K. Orr Shoe Company
ATLANTA

For Sale Everywhere

Silvers & Woods

Manufacturing
Jewelers

Diamond Mountings

Medals, Badges, Etc,

Made to Order

REPAIRING

Bell Phone
M. 1935

8I/2 Whitehall St.
Atlanta, Ga.

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Hats

We bring
New York
to Dou.

Simple
as well as
Sumptuous

and ever the
smartness that
belongs to
the thmg that
is different

THIS spirit is responsible for the suc-
cess ol the Millinery at this Shop,
always showing the newest modes
of the month.

Ingenious conceptions in clever,
original hats, lovely creations of grace
direct from New York to you.

New York Model Hat Shop

32 Whitehall

KODAKS

and

SUPPLIES

Send Us Your Films for

Correct
Development

GLENN PHOTO
STOCK CO.

183 Peachtree Street

Mail Orders Solicited

|^^>^>^x$xJ^>^.x^^.^^^>^^xS^>x$.^H^xM><$>^^.^^

^><S^xj>^^^<!>^ ^^<^%

^^>4xS^..^>^^$^K>^xS><J^>^.^>^^>5,^>^5^><><$xJ^.^^

'The Kind that Mother Makes"

Cakes, Sandwiches, Salads, etc.

Anything hked by Agnes Scott
Girls is found at the

Silhouette Tea Room

Patronize it Girls It's Yours

>K$xSx$^>^>4x#xJxS>x$xJ^5^xx$sjK$xjK$>>>xJxJx$^<^^

W. MILLEDGE WHITE

Photographer

1 Yz Auburn Ave. Phone Ivy 366
Atlanta, Ga.

PORTRAITS AND COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHS

Freshest and Best Always

FISH, OYSTERS,
POULTRY, GAME

FULTON MARKET

Phone M. 1500
25-27 East Alabama St.

Compliments of

Smith's Pharmacy

E. F. FARMER

Fancy Groceries and
Fresh Meats

Phone Dec. 471 E. Howard Ave.

RILEY'S DRUG STORE

315 East College Ave.

CANDIES, ICE CREAM, SODA WATER

AND TOILET ARTICLES

Each Glass and Spoon Sterilized
With Hot Water

Open Till 10:30 P. M.
Phone Dec. 640 or Dec. 9110

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W. H. Weekes, Vice-President
S. R. Christie, Vice-President
W. E. McCalla, Chm. Board of Directors
J. Howell Green, President
A. R. Almon, Cashier and Trust Officer
W. C. McLain, Assistant Cashier

Decatur Bank & Trust Co.

Capital $100,000. Surplus $65,000.

Depository of The State of Georgia

DECATUR, GEORGIA

Phone Decatur 545

CHANDLER

309 College Ave.

FULL ASSORTMENT OF

Pencils, Tablets and All School Supplies
Ice Cream, Sodas, Cigars, Sandwiches,

Drags, Magazines
CHANDLER'S PHARMACY

The Nearest to Agnes Scott College

<$^XjXjKjX<J$XjxJ^^^^<JxS>^X-^Xj>^^^>^Kj^Xj>^^xJ^xJxJ^<$^^^

almaps qlad to gee tfje

^gneg ^cott (girls

3n abbition to aur regular
tntnu, pou toill (inli belitiousi
santiti]ic|)efi, takte, aalatis anti
canbitB. 3111 ti)c "goofiits"
tijat insure tije iuutii of a
Jfeast

Contf in a? often asi pou can. Wt
are iustt up lf)e Street from tfje Beta-
tur car line.

Efje

Baffobtl

in iSortf) ^rpor Street

You Will Find

"Everything that is Good to Eat" at

KAMPER'S

492 - 498 PEACHTREE STREET ATUNTA, GA.

Bell Phones Ivy 5000 and Hemlock 3^00

Try Our Own Bakery Cakes, Candies, Delica-
tessen Sandwiches and Cooked Meats, Salads,
Pickles, Olives, Etc.

GARDEN TEA most cups per pound

Phillips & Crew Piano Co,

will move to their new location

183 Peachtree Street

Corner Ellis Street

ABOUT THE FIRST OF MAY

"Everything in the Realm of Music"

ALPINE FLAX STATIONERY

FILLS every requirement for paper suitable to the uses of Her Royal
Highness, the American Girl. Made of pure white linen rags, in the crystal
spring waters of the Berkshire Hills, this paper is fit for a queen. Get
it in box stationery, tablets or envelopes, at the stationery store. Made by

MONTAG BROTHERS, Inc., Atlanta, Georgia

Taxi - Cabs

Ivy 166

Ivy 5190

Open All Night

Open and Closed Cars for

All Occasions

Cars for Business,

Emergency, Social Belle Isle Automobile

and Pleasure Rent Service

Purposes 4 Luckie Street 0pp. Piedmont

<S^^^^Kjx^x$x$^>^xJ.4xSxJxJ><SxJ^><$xJx$xJxJxJ^^^xJ^xS^

W. L. DuPREE

CHAS. E. DuPREE

JOHN 0. DuPREE

W. L. & JOHN 0. DuPREE

Real Estate - - - Renting - - - Loans

Alanta Trust Company Building

Atlanta

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What About
Your Rainy Day?

No Account
Too Large
None Too
Small

Millions of Americans who learned to SAVE during
the war are keeping up the good habit.

If you are not saving now, you are in the minority
you are turning your back upon opportunity.

More than 18,000 Atlantans about one in every
sixteen now have deposits in the savings de-
partment of the Citizens and Southern Bank.

They are fortifying themselves against adversity
laying by while they can.

Citizens and Southern Bank

Savannah

ATUNTA
Macon

Augusta

XS^X$^Ke>^X$xS^^><S^KSxS>>^xJ^^>#^X$^^>^^xJ^J>^^^xjKj>^^^

^>^^><$>^><$^>'$>-^>^>^>^>'^'i^^^<i>^><i^>^^>^><$><s^^

1865 The Oldest National Bank in The Cotton States

SERVICE - SAVINGS - SECURITY
AT THE ATLANTA NATIONAL

The gratifying growth in our Savings Department is the re-
sult of EFFICIENT SERVICE, perfected through fifty-four
years of continuous and constructive effort, and a security
that is UNSURPASSED.

You will find it to your advantage to keep your Savings Ac-
count with this STRONG BANK whose record for SECURITY
and SERVICE is unexcelled.

Located in the heart of Atlanta's business district, you will
find the Atlanta National's Savings Department, on the first,
or street floor, most convenient at all times.
Our Savings Department is open from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M.
Your account is cordially invited.

THE ATLANTA NATIONAL BANK

1921

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More Work

and better done. Mind bright
as a dollar quick as a flash.
That's how

mi

will help you. It is so cheerful, wholesome and
satisfying a drink. Good for both body and brain.

Delicious Refreshing
Thirst- Quenching

Whenever
you see an
Arrow think
of Coca-Cola

Demand the Genuine Refuse Substitutes

THE COCA-COLA CO.

ATLANTA, GA.

/

^><MJxxS>^x$,.>M>^^^>^$>^^^>#<^^>#^x$x$>^><4vS:-^x^^

<8^><XS><$X$>^^^^^XJXJKJ)<$K$>K$^XJ^^X$XSX$XS.^^^X><J^^

Phone Main 1769

French Embroidery
Works

Beading,
Braiding,

Hemstitching,
Buttons,

Button Holes and
Pleating

Mail Orders Promptly Attended
40y2 Whitehall St. Atlanta, Ga.

Approved
Marinello Shop

On Balcony

Chamberlin- Johnson - DuBose

Facial and Scalp Work done
in the most thorough and sci-
entific manner. Also Mani-
curing and Chiropody.

Phone for Appointments

Gertrude P. Miller, Mgr.

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VICTROLAS

and

SONORAS

$25.00 to $500.00

The only place in the City where you
can hear the World's Greatest Talking
Machines side by side for comparison.

Victor Records

Our Stock is as complete as
the Factories can make it

BAME'S Inc.

107 Peachtree Street

Opposite Piedmont Hotel

Graduates

Love jewelry; good de-
pendable jewelry, the
kind that stands the test
of wear; whether they
receive it as a present
or buy it themselves.
That's the only kind we
keep. The best proof of
this is customers who
have bought regularly
of us for years. Come
in and see

A. M. BALDING

Jeweler

17 Edgewood Ave.

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Eugene V, Haynes Co,

DIAMONDS

Stephenson

ATLANTA
Where Photography

73 Peachtree Street
ATLANTA, GEORGIA

is a Fine Art

QUALITY
SERVICE
COURTESY

521-2-3-4-5

Connally BIdg.

Phone Main 2874

"When you think of Flowers,
think of us."

WEINSTOCK'S

FLOWER SHOP
In the Arcade

Compliments of

S. A. CLAYTON

BELL PHONE MAIN 1241

116 Peachtree Arcade

Atlanta

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FURNITURE and RUGS

AT PRE-WAR PRICES
Save Money By Buying At

Robinson Furniture Co.

27 East Hunter St.

EXPERT WATCHMAKER

Henry Muench

The Peachtree Jeweler

Watches, Diamonds,
Jewelry

No. 65 A Peachtree St.

Atlanta, Ga.

a and G. ROSENBAUM

Successors lo "Kutz"

Advanced
Millinery

WHITEHALL

Vogue Hat3 Excl
in Atlanta

Coniphnients of
BOOKHAMMER

LOMAX STUDIO

PHOTOGRAPHS

231, Whitetiall Street, Atlanta, Ga.

Over Jacobs' Pharmacy to Your Right

PHONE MAIN 4604

^'

yrom

h

G GEO0aiANTERR/\CE
sClosa To JOMir

^^i^'>M/^i>^

MUSE
Correct Footwear

for the

Fashionable College Girl

The new. the fashionable
lor ihe school days the
vacation and the gradua-
tion, with its dances, lare-
wells and formalities. Here
are the appropriate shoes lor
every single one ol your
lovely Irocks.

thenlic,

xtensive display

S45-PEACHTREE

Geo. Muse Clothing Co,

Peacntree, vvalton and Broad, Atlanta

.<J>^^xJxJ^><$xJ><SxjSxJ^$,^^^^>^^^xJ>^^>^x$xJ^;^>^>^x$xJ^^

^f<S^xS>^^$^^^>^^^^^>^xS->xJxS>M^^^^xS>^>^^^>^.^^x<J^ >^^<>^x^^><$xJx$x$^^^^^xJ^^>^x^xS^>^^Jx

Compliments of

J. S. FIELD CO.

SHOE DEPARTMENT

43 Whitehall St.
Atlanta

CREECH COAL

Domestic
Gas
Steam

HIGH IN HEAT UNITS
LOW IN ASH

RANDALL BROS, Inc.

Peters Building
ATUNTA, GA.

;<<$^xJ^^xJxJxs^xM>^<{><J^J^S-.^>mMxM^^xS>>^S^^ <^^J>#^-^xn$^nS><Sx$><$>^>^<J>;.>^xSxS)^xJ^x^^>^xJx,

Southern Accordion
Plaiting Co.

781/2 Whitehall St. Phone M. 799

Beading
Buttons
Button Holes
Hemstitching
Plaiting
Scalloping
Linen Marking

GEORGE\S

Shoe Shine
Parlor

FOR LADIES

George M. Gialelis, Proprietor

7 East Alabama Street

Atlanta, Ga.

xjxjK8xJxs>.SxSx<Sy$>^xJx$^x$^>^^^xJ^><S>^xS^><$>^^x^^ <?^>^xJxSx8^x$x$xJxSxS^^>^x$xSxSx$^xSxJxJxJx$x8^.^^^$^

The Growth of an Idea

An idea is a seed which flowers into
heautiful perfection only when every ele-
ment required in the soil of its production
is present, and the hands which nurture it
are sh'lled for the peculiar tash which
they are to perform.

7^0 matter how original the ^lan u^on
which the annual is constructed, how
artistic the designs, how hrilliant the read-
ing matter, the final success defends u;^on
the visualization of these ideas in such a
way that the printed hook is the living em-
hodiment of the spiritual conception.

A. perfectly equipped factory, together
with thirty-four years of sympathetic co-
operation with many annual staffs,
should, we helieve, fit us for the work of
combining our mechanical skill with the
editors' ideas to produce the highest qual-
ity of college annual.

Foote S^ Davies Co.

ATLANTA

^xJ><$xJ^H$xJ^<$xJx<J><S><SKjyM>^x<^>^>^>>^><^^

For College Girls

All manner of dainty stationery, beautiful fountain pens and Eversharp pencils, charming kodaks,
lovely kodak albums and memory books, bewitcKing picture frames, picturesque novelties, Victrolas in
all models, and tbe latest Victor records.

Our 8-Iiour film developing service is at tbe special service of college students. No better pictures
arc produced by photographic art. Glossy finish pictures cost the same as velvet finish.

The house that guarantees satisfaction.

GOODHART-TOMPKINS CO.

83 Peachtree Street
Atlanta, Georgia

HEART OF HARLAN'^ COALS

: CLOVER FORK COAL CO. HARLAN COLLIERIES. Inc. WILSON-BERGER COAL CO
MARY-HELEN COAL CO. REX COAL CO.

FOR THE SOUTHEAST AND TIDEWATER

Virginia Blue G

ue *jein

Black Mountain Mining Co. Benedict Coal Corporation

Auxier Elknorn Penn Lee Coal Co.

REY AND GEM La FOLLETTE. TENNESSEE JELLICO

SOLD BY

BEWLEY-DARST COAL COMPANY

905 Union Central Building

CINCINNATI

KNOXVILLE, TENN.
SPARTANBURG. S. C.

Candler Buildin
ATLANTA, GA.

you can do it better with electricity

Whether heating curlers, ironing
a frock, making toast, coffee, tea,
or giving a chafing dish party,
you can do it better and cheaper
with electric appliances. The
modern woman does not treadle
her machine, the Davis Electric
does the work. She does not
prepare the breakfast over a
hot oven, but uses an electric

grill. In fact, there is a way
to do everything that might other-
wise be drudgery, by simply con-
necting the new appliances to an
electric socket. And we have
them all.

Carter Electric Co.

63 Peachtree St.

Atlanta

^^->M>x<Jx$>^x$xJ^xx$>^x$xJxJxJxJxJ><J^x^>^>Ks>^^^ <$xJxJ>^xJ>xSx$>xS><$>^Kj>^xS>^^Kj>^>^^x$^xJ^xJ^

Blue Diamond Goal Sales
Company

Sole Shippers
KENTUCKY-HARLAN, HIGHCLIFF

Steam and Domestic Coals

FRED E. GORE, Southern Manager

1128 Candler Building ATLANTA, GA.

A. T. Spalding & Bro.

74 North Broad Street
Atlanta

<S^>^^x$xS>^>^^^>^xS>><J^>#<$xJ>^xJxJx$xJxSkJ^^>^<Jx$x^<J.^^

^^^xJ>^<Jx^><J>^yJ-^xJ^ J>^>^>$,^^>^x<S^><>^^^xs><j^^ (jxJxJx^^x<JxJx^xJ.^^^^x$^kSxJ>^k$^k<

Cole Book and Art Company

Pictures ana Framing a Specialty
Late Novels. Standard Books, Gift Books, Bibles

Alt Department

Bell Phone Main 1563

Stationery Department

Bell Phone Main 1564

Loose Leaf Devices Commercial
Stationery

123 Wbitehall Street

Atlanta, Georgia

-<^'#^>4^>4^>>x^x<J^^^>^^xJ).J>^^x^xJ>^^^^

W. E. FLODING

Manufacturer

Pennants, Badges, Banners,
Graduating Gowns, Caps, Etc.

Costumes for Rent

Your Patronage Will Be Appreciated
46 W. Mitchell St. Atlanta, Ga.

W. M. Sutton

W. T. Whisenamt

W. M. Sutton

Up-to-Date Shoe
Repairing

5 E. Alabama St. Connally Bldg.

Phone Main 1269

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30 Years In Atlanta

Most Complete Stock in South

CHINA. CUT GLASS. ART
WARE. BRONZES, CHOICE
WEDDING GIFTS

DOBBS & WEY CO.

57 N. Pryor St. Near Lowry Bank

<jH*'4^-si>'?.<$-?-* ^.<<j <-4-^'?-<sS'^<s>-<^- ^m-'i-^'^^

^^'>^^^S^^>^>^><$^><MX$X$X$KJS>^^$XJ^^>^KJ.^^^>^^

HniiiiiUHpiiiiiiiiiii

'li.

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